Page 10-Wednesday, June 9, 1982-The Michigan Daily Speed market flourishes in city I (Continuedfrom Page 1) especially females, are turning to pills instead of turning away food. BUT SPEED GETS the system so worked up, hunger is forgotten. Another reason speed is preferred to over-the- counter drugs is that speed is stronger and more dependable. It will keep you going - but it is also harsher on the body than an over-the-counter drug. David, who desperately needed to get a "hit" to keep him studying, works as a waiter at two restaurants and takes classes at the University. He doesn't sleep much, but he is hoping to earn enough money and learn enough Chinese to go to Taiwan next year. "I went in to Health Service for a sore throat," David said as he pecked a cigarette and quickly blew the smoke to the side. "The doctor took my blood pressure and said, 'Boy, you're not going to see 30.' " DAVID LIT another cigarette and continued, "I know I'm killing myself, but I have no time to do anything but survive right now." David, only 20 years old, looks like he has survived a world war first hand. His eyes, veiled in a netting of blood vessels, are sunk into a face still covered with more peach fuzz than beard. "If I run tomorrow, I can bring my Renta a r from Eco no-Car We rent to 19TYR. OLD STUDENTS!f blood pressure down in no time," David said. He laughed, "You know, I'll probably have to take something to get me going so that I can go running." IT IS A vicious cycle. You take speed to get things done. Two days later, your system it so drained of energy that it takes a day or two to recover. But there's more work to do. Maybe it's a term paper, or a reading assignment. Or may a shift at work. And you need more speed. Though not an addiction at first, speed becomes a necessity. But the vicious cycle turns faster and faster. Faster than the stacatto of the prickly tingling in your fingertips and nose that sometimes come with the use of speed. You need speed now because your body depends on it to get up in the mor- ning like other people depend on a cup of coffee. Although you know that what you're doing to your body is lethal, you have no time to recover. Not until the semester's over, at least. Not until all of your work is finished. Then you can relax. Not yet, though ... RHONDA SMITH, a registered nurse who works in both the Emergency unit and Poison Information at University Hospital, knows of a girl whose body couldn't wait for her to relax. "She came in just before Thanksgiving," Smith recalls. "Only 21 years old, and she died of a heart at- tack. We couldn't figure out why. There wasn't anything, you know, drugs or what-have-you, in her system to the ex- tent that it would cause a heart attack. She was pretty healthy too. But then we went into her purse and found some pills. Amphetamines. They probably gradually did her in." Smith said that not many people come to the Emergency Unit on a speed overdose because their friends can usually "bring them down." People are afraid of getting involved both with the police and a reprimanding medical staff, she said. IRONICALLY, THE University Hospital plays a significant role on the supply side of the speed market in Ann Arbor. Medical students, and more frequently, the immediate family of a doctor, find ways to siphon the drugs in- to the mouths of the general public. For instance, the son of a University, Hospital doctor would merely walk into his father's study, reach into an enor- mous glass display jar full of capsules and pills, and take out whatever his customers requested. His father very recently caught his son with his hands VARIOUS SAMPLES OF the drug known as 'speed' are displayed. in the cookie jar, so to speak, and his clientele had to look elsewhere - but not very hard - for a new supplier. Speed is most commonly recognized as a white pill resembling penacillin, or in small tablets. Other pills, such as large black, translucent capsules known as Black Beauties, a biphetamine, or capsules resembling perhaps Contac cold medicine are also popular. THE PRICE FOR a hit, or a pill, ranges from 25 cents to one dollar, depending on how much is available at a given time. Around finals and mid term time, speed averages 50 cents to a dollar-twenty-five a hit - if you can find it. Choose from small economical cars to vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request We accept cash deposits OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ECONO-CAR A GELCO COMPANY 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ANN ARBOR Cocaine deaths triple, ATLANTA (UPI)-Cocaine deaths have tripled in the past six years and many users who don't die suffer such ugly side effects as facial disfiguration and hallucinations their skin is crawling with insects, federal health of- ficials said. The National Centers for Disease Control, citing recent statistics from the National Institute of Drug Abuse, said almost 10 million Americans are now snorting, injecting or "freebasing" the drug, which a study in the 1970's concluded had little effect on society. Edgar Adams, associate director for epidemiology at the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said latest figures showed 61 deaths in 1976 and 272 deaths in 1980. Cocaine-related emergencies, he said, were up from 1,200 in 1976 to 4,400 in 1981. THE CDC SAID the dangers involved in cocaine use "include consequences of both acute and chronic use." Acute toxicity, similar to that caused by amphetamines, is characterized by nervousness, dizziness, blurred vision and tremors, and may lead to con- vulsions, cardiac arrhythmias and respiratory arrest, the health agency said. Chronic use, the CDC said, can produce ulceration and perforation of the nasal septum, weight loss, insomnia anxiety, paranoia, fomication , a sen- sation as of small insects crawling over the skin, and hallucination. ADAMS EXPLAINED heavy cocaine use could cause the bone structure in the nose to collapse. He said the drug could also cause a decaying in the nose and "cocaine window," which is a hole in the nose. The CDC, in its weekly Morbidity and Mortality Report, said there had been changes in the route of administration In dorms, speed is the most expen- sive, and the lowest in quality, because the dorm residents don't know where else to look for it, and in many cases, they really don't know what they're buying. On the top floor of a notorious Univer- sity dorm, "The Doctors" is scrawled across a memo board on one of the doors. "Doctor" is slang for a pill ped- dler, and behind the door of "The Doc- tors" memo board live not pre-med students; but three engineers: Ari, Bob, and Phil. Phil did most of the talking. "I CAN SELL you some speed for 60 See SPEED, Page 11 study says of the drug from inhaling or "snorting" to intravenous administration and freebasing, or processing the concaine into a pure form by removing the hydrochloride base and then smoking the freebase. Smoking and injecting cocaine into the bloodstream results in more immediate and direct absorption of the drug and produces a quicker and more intense euphoria, while at the same time sub- stantially increasing the possibility of acute toxic reaction, the health agency said. Two-thirds of the self-reported cocaine users were between the ages of 18 and 25, according to the agency. Males outnumbered females by more than two to one, both in the use of cocaine and in the number of non-fatal cocaine-related emergencies. More whites used the drug than non-whites, by a ratio of 7-1. 0 4 4