the Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 9,192- P6ge 1 DIE-HARD DEMONSTRATORS KEEP CONSTANT VIGIL Living outside the White House WASHING'I ON (AP)- You don't need to get elec- says that , demonstrations have become so shipped back to the United States. ted president to live at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. All it fashionable that authorities frequently get calls from His signs proclaim, "Wanted-Wisdom and takes is a cause, some homemade signs and a desire tourists asking about forthcoming protests. Honesty" and "Hypocrisy Stinks." Thomas considers to sleep on the sidewalk outside the White House fen- There's no need, however, to schedule a special himself a citizen of the world and a crusader against ce. visit to see the "fence people" and their row of signs. national boundaries. Known to the Secret Service as the "fence people," Rugged individualists as demonstrators go, they a cadre of free-lance protesters retires nightly on camp day and night under the noses of the passing "I'VE ACCOMPLISHED quite a bit sitting here," pads and sleeping bags following a day of scrounging sightseeing buses and the White House residents. he says. When he gets hungry, "I get food out of dum- for food and exercising their First Amendment William Thomas claims to have seniority among psters. You'd be surprised how much good stuff is rights, the six hard-core, fencers, whose ranks are oc- thrown away," Thomas says. "And people bring food - Protests are commonplace in front of the White casionally enlarged when some of Washington's to us. House and across the street in Lafayette Park. The street people decide to spend a night or two at the National Park Police says there are about 1,000 White House rather than a park bench. "The Earth is really one unit, and man has only demonstrations a year in all of Washington, CALLED "DOCTOR" by the other five regulars, imagined these lines for the purpose of serving his sometimes as many as ten a day. Thomas says he initiated the sidewalk vigil last June own self-interest," says Thomas, who expresses no GEORGE BERKLACY, a Park Police spokesman, after his passport was lifted in England and he was desire to plead his case personally to the president. Speed: City users can find it if they want it (Continued from Page 10) cents a hit. I have a ten cent mark-up, but I really don't make a profit," he said with an air of nonchalance about his clandestine business. Phil sat back on a ragged sofa in the cluttered dorm room. The walls were covered with a collage of Miller beer and hard rock posters. When asked what he was selling, Phil crossed his arms and raised the tone of his voice almost an octave above the smooth drole he had spoken in moments ago. "They're pharmaceuticals. Time- release, so it doesn't hit you as hard as straight amphetamines." Phil denied they were Christmas trees, referring to green and blue cap- sules available by prescription and used mostly by athletes. Christmas trees sharpen reflexes and quicken alertness - a favorite both among coaches and students who are not in- terested in losing too much weight. PHIL SAID HIS were different. "They're black and yellow. Other times they're green and yellow. But they're pharmaceuticals," Phil explained, "time release." Perhaps Phil and his roommates are dealing in what are called Yellow Jackets, a strain of amphetamine. They may not even know what they're dealing in - it could be Allarest, because any drug, from Anacin to heroin, is a "pharmaceutical" in that it can be sold either by perscription or over-the-counter. The dorm Doctors get their "phar- maceuticals" from a friend of a friend and a friend, etc., not unusual in dealing with speed. Annie, who got Liz- zie speed for David, had called a friend who got it from her brother, a medical doctor. Phil, Ari, and Bob don't know the direct source of what they're selling. "I THINK it's University Hospital," Phil said ominously. "It might bo Kalamazoo though," Ari interrupted. "Yeah," Phil agreed, "but it might be U-Hospital, too." As much speed itself is dangerous when abused, as it often is, it is even more dangerous dealing with someone who doesn't know what they are selling. A good Doctor, like any real M.D., is concerned about both maintaining his or her reputation and the welfare of the customer. No one wants to be respon- sible for the death of a 21-year-old heart attack victim. So where is the "high quality" speed? RESTAURANTS IN any city, Ann Arbor being no exception, are always dependable outlets for drugs, or at least } a good word on where to go for them. The ironic but true joke at one Ann Arbor restaurant one Friday night was that the staff made more money selling drugs, including high-grade strains of marijuana, cocaine, and speed, than the restaurant itself did selling food and drinks. Management either doesn't know about the restaurant's un- derground business, or it chooses to ignore it. Most managers accept it as inevitable. Shelley, a university student who works as a waitress, makes a few ad- ditional dollars on the side selling blue tables called "blues," a combination of dexadrine and amphetamines. "ONE HALF OF one of these will keep you up all night," Shelley advises a customer. "You'll really mess up your stomach if you do more than that." Shelley should know, standing at five feet, ten inches, with a weight of only 115 pounds. She says that being busy at work keeps her slim. But the blues assure that she keeps up the often hec- tic pace of her job. Shelley's blues are one dollar a hit, imported from England where they're legal. Her boyfriend's brother sends them over. Again, another chain of dealers, but in this case, each link is definable, where in other situations, such as that of the dorm Doctors, the chain is tangled and perhaps even inef- fective. ONE MIGHT MAKE the sordid analogy that speed in Ann Arbor can be delivered as quickly as a pizza from one of its many pizza restaurants. Note that David got his hit in forty minutes, the same amount of time it takes for a pizza to be delivered after it is ordered. Unfortunately for David, both of the restaurants he works for have co- workers who can supply him with what has become his sustenance. His favorite and most effective hit is crystallized speed or powder, sulphate and amphetamine cut and stretched with a bit of caffeine. David either snor- ts it like cocaine, or adds the speed to his coffee, and zips through another day at school and work. When the speed market is desolate, people turn to over-the-counter drugs as a last resort. Favorites among the students include water and diet pills, such as Aqua Ban and Dexatrim. "THE HIGH," exclaimed a resident director for a dorm, Michelle," is almost like speed. You get nervous, headaches, and a numbness in your face and stuff." She began to play with her hands as if to quiet a numbness, and added, "But it's not as harsh, really, as speed." Chemical additives, such as am- monium chloride in the water pills, and phenapropanalomine in the diet pills, have long-term adverse effects too. Pharmacist Greg Puntiniello, of Richardson's Pharmacy explained, "The ammonium additive stimulates the kidneys to flush the system such that it becomes bleached of vitamins. The system doesn't have a change to be practical and selective because of the caffeine." Pantiniello said that both kinds of drugs have up to 200 milligrams of caf- feine, comparable to two cups of coffee. Amphetamines, on the other hand, would be comparable to the caffeine of ten cups of coffee - all at once. PANTINIELLO ADDED that phenapropanalomine acts as an ap- petite suppressant, but because of the caffeine, the chemical cannot be selec- tive, and stimulates other areas of the brain. Phenspropanalomine is also used in antihistimines, and causes the user'a mucous membranes to contract, leaving the eyes, nose, and mouth dry. The adverse effects of amphetamines are worse: Brain damage, heart problems, and kidney failure, as in the case of the young woman who died of a heart attack, the last-resort over-the- counter drugs can catch up with the user and bring on a comparable magnitude of problems. Will the user stop taking speed when the semester's over? Or will he or she really rely on it to get them through a summer job - if it is that demanding and they are that dependent on speed? What about after they graduate? Will they be able to keep up with the rat race? Will they make it to graduation? Maybe. Maybe all it will take it one more hit. Just one more. And then you can relax. Not until all your work is finished. Then you can relax. Not yet though ... ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A REkS$ON2 -rO LET 005E. Q M Z N . o oc c tiC c o og -p5No COVER OLLEG E1. . s o)rLf F~t~l- ro N(Te VT 5uI4~WE5~.4O~O~e P.... SLL L E 5459cL V 8OSLO BOAT MOO L1-rE RNER CRUl51 'FfOOT-E1lV 7 1is. Nls - %.WLN 'i V'z TIWCKETS AUA1L~b'A - r C. rC. &VfL.ET