Meditation for Artists taught by STERN MORG AN An opportunityufor artists to learn techniques of meditation as a way of developing better focus and more creativity in their work. A different method of meditation will be offered each week. Attendance can be regular or occasional. For actors, dancers, musicians, painters, craftspeople, directors, sculptors, and all artists and for anyone interested. Everyone welcome, no admission fee. EVERY TUESDRY at 8 pm at CANTERBURY LOFT 332 S. State Street, Second Floor, near Nickels Arcade Beginning Tuesday, October 3rd: Self Development Through the Arts RUDOLF STEINER HOUSE 1923 Geddes Avenue Classes starting October 4, 1978 in Page 2-Thursday, September 28, 1978-The Michigan Daily Strikers (Continued from Page1)> past rail disputes, the administration can seek emergency legislation from Congress to order workers back to their jobs and to impose a final contract set- tlement. THE BROTHERHOOD of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks first struck the Norfolk & Western Railway Co. July 10 after two years of incon- clusive talks aimed at protecting clerks' jobs against automation. On Tuesday, pickets spread the strike to more than 40 other railroad lines. Here in Michigan, state transpor- tation officials said traffic on at least three rail freight lines which receive state assistance has been affected, the Ann Arbor Railroad, Michigan Nor- thern Railroad and the Lenawee County Railroad. Service across the Straits. of 0 7J given {ui Mackinac and Lake Michigan via car ferry has been suspended due to strikes against the Soo Line and the Green Bay and Western. "THE CURRENT railroad strike is disrupting the flow of materials vital to Michigan industry," Milliken !said in a telegram to Transportation Secretary Brock Adams. "Already there are in- dications of production slowdowns which will soon have a devastating im- pact on Michigan's economy. "The economic disruption on Michigan of a prolonged strike could quickly result in an emergency situation justifying strong and direct action by yourself and the President," Milliken said. Picket lines around Grand Trunk terminals in Michigan dispersed yesterday and commuter passenger imatum line service for Detroit was resumed. The strike could hit Americans in their cereal bowl. A spokesman for the Kellogg's Co. said a continued walkout could close one or more of its five plan- ts. "There's no doubt this comes at a very difficult time, just as farmers are harvesting the biggest corn crop ever," said Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland in Springfield, Ill. If the deadline passes, he warned "both sides can expect with certainty that the ad- ministration will take further action." A spokesman for the Association of American Railroads said a "vast majority of freight is being held up" and predicted a two-week strike would double unemployment. About 350,000 railroad workers are directly affected by the walkout.M Candidate limitation, sought b assembly (Continued from Page 1) committee should MSA boycott the presidential search. James Waters (D-Muskegon) said he would leave it up to MSA. "I wouldn't take any initiative myself as to having another (student committee) setup." "MSA has been invited to form a committee. If they decline the in- vitation, they may do so," Laro said. Baker, however, would opt for organized student input if MSA refused to form a committee. "If the MSA doesn't care to take part, I would certainly move to develop an alternative system by which students could have an opportunity to par- ticipate within the original framework," Baker said. Daily Official Bulletin ==== ======= ==& 333==== ===ems mmemmmm mmm wa1 Eurythmy Sheila Ross WEDNESDAYS 7:30-9:30pm Painting Robert Logsdon WEDNESDAYS THURSDAYS 8-10 pm 10-12.am JOIN THE DAILY - The Mystery Robert Logsdon of Color THURSDAYS 8-10 pm THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 Daily Calendar: Ctr. Japanese Studies: Robert E. Cole, "Some Preliminary Observations on the Diffusion of Participative Management in Jap. and Sweden, Commons rm., Lane, noon. American Assoc. of University Professors: Jane Hill, Wayne State. "Issues in Higher Education," Rm 1 and 2 League, noon. Audio-Visual Services: Heart Attack, New Pulse of Life, Aud., PhII, 12:10 p.m. "Medicare - care Organization: Sidney Katx, Michigan State.-U., "Uses of Assessment in Long Term Card," 3001 SPHI, 1p.m. Environmental Studies: panel discussion, "Energy," 1528 CCL, 3p.m. MHRI: Kenneth Livingston, Wellesley Hosp., Toronto, "Limbic Mechanisms and the Kindling Model of Epilepsy," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: D. Williams, "All Order Bounds on the Cutoff Euclidean: 6:Perturbation Expansion," 2038 Ran dall, 4 p.m. Geology/Mineralogy: Robert A. Berner, Yale-U., "Mechanism of Feldspar Weathering" 4001 CCL, 4p.m. Diabetes Ctr.: Norman Soler, "Aspects of Diabetes in Pregnancy," s6350 Hosp., 4p.m. Naval Arch/Marine Eng.: J. Bordeaux, "The Design of LGN Tankers," 229W. Eng., 7:30 p.m. For further Information please call 971-8951 Sponsored by the RUDOLF STEINER INSTITUTE OF THE GREAT LAKES AREA Six stories, one plot: The Romance of OurAge is Technology 4 ~-Rendezvous n Spain. You're a software applications specialist. When you picked this career, you never dreamed that one day you'd rendezvous in Barcelona, Spain with two Navy destroyers. But when your company is Texas Instruments and one of your cus- tomers is the U. S. Sixth Fleet, you learn to expect the unexpected. The destroyers are equipped with TI computers and they need new software fast. You come aboard and sail with the Fleet until your job is completed. Not a bad assignment for a soft- ware specialist named Susie. You're glad you got into technology. The Incredible Talking Chip. You're an inte- grated circuit designer at TI. You've helped find a way to make a chip talk, something no integrated circuit has ever done before. First application: an electronic aid that helps children learn to spell. The world's first talking textbook. And that's just the beginning.- The talking chip's potential is mind- bending. You're glad you got into technology. FM N The Salesman's mow.Dream. You're a TI sales engineer. You've got what is prob- ably one of the most irresistible selling messages in the history of salesmanship. It goes like this: "Hold this TI-59 Scientific Calculator in your hand. Now, let's compare it to the most popular computer of the 1950s- the IBM 650. "The 650 weighed almost three tons, required five to 10 tons of air conditioning and 45 square feet of floor space. And it cost $200,000, in 1955 money. "Now look at the TI-59 Calculator you're holding in the palm of your hand. It has a primary memory capacity more than double that of the 650. It performs its principal functions five to 10 times faster. And it retails for under $300." With a story like this, the hardest part of your job is holding onto your sample. You're glad you got into technology. The Joy Of Complication. You're in semi- conductor design .:at TI. You love it when people at parties ask you what you do. You say, "I make things complicated." (Pause.) "In fact, I got promoted recently for creating some major compl-ications." What you mean (but seldom explain) is this: the more active element groups (AEGs) you can put on a single chip of silicon, the more the average AEG cost goes down. In short, you make things cheaper by making them more complicated. Your work made it possible for a TI consumer product that sold three years ago for about $70 to sell today for $14.95. Your future looks wonderfully complicated. You're at 30,000 AEGs per chip now and 100,000 is in sight. You're glad you got into technology. Outsmarting Smog. You've always designed air- borne radars for TI customers. Now, all of a sudden you know your next radar design is going to stay at the airport. On the ground. It's on the ground that traffic controllers at Los Angeles Inter- national Airport have a problem. They can "see" incoming and out- going airplanes on their radar just fine, so long as the airplanes are in the air. But when the airplanes are on the ground-touching down, taking off, taxiing, parking -they are some- times impossible to see and control. Ground smog obscures them. You believe you have an answer to the smog problem. You dig out the plans for an airborne ground- mapping radar you helped design. You adapt the design so the L. A. controllers can use it to see through smog. It works beautifully. Today your smog-piercing radar is widely known as Airport Surface Detection Equipment (ASDE). It's standard equipment at L. A. Inter- national and at the airport in Geneva, Switzerland. Other airports with smog and snow problems are expected to have it soon. You're glad you're in technology. Oil Sleuths International. You're a geo- physicist. A good one. You could be with any of the big, oil companies. But you wanted to get with a company whose specialty is the same as yours. Exploration. That's why you're at TI, in Geophysical Service. TI explorer ships, TI photo- geologic aircraft and TI truck- and tractor-mounted vibrator systems are working all over the world. They're finding oil. And they're identifying areas where no oil. exists, thereby saving huge losses in drilling costs. Also, TI's worldwide computer network and its Advanced Scientific Computer is making 3-D recording and processing possible. This ex- clusive exploration technique is the only practical way to unscramble "no-record" areas on land and sea. You're a happy sleuth. You're in on the biggest'hunt in history. And your team is out in front. You're glad you got into technology. Senate approves gas bill (Continued from Page 1) a statement: "If this monstrosity ever becomes law it will be a disaster." Carter asked Congress in April 1977 to join him in declaring "the moral equivalent of war" on the energy crisis by approving a package designed to conserve scarce fuels by making them more expensive and taxing their inef- ficient use. THE HOUSE passed most of what Carter requested in August 1977..But until yesterday's vote, that was the last' congressional victory the Carter' program enjoyed as the Senate began systematically dismantling the plan's major provisions. Senate passage of the gas-pricing bill followed an intensive White House lob-' bying effort. Administration officials portrayed the plan as crucial to futur U.S. energy policies and to halting t. decline of the U.S. dollar. Supporters said the measure would allow enough new gas to be found to reduce oil imports by about 1.5 million barrels a day by 1985 - going a long way to meeting the reduction of two million barrels a day Carter vowed at last July's economic summit in Bonn. However, opponents of the -com- promise - a coalition of liberals who called it too costly for consumers and conservatives who complained it doesn't deregulate quickly enough - claimed the measure would not have any appreciable effects on either gas production or oil imports. ULTIMATE ROOTS FALMOUTH, Maine (AP)-After 41 years in the plumbing business, Richard Waltz figures he's'finally found the ultimate of roots. "I've never seen anything quite like it," he comments about a 32-foot-long, 100-pound mass of tiny, almost hair-like interwoven root fibers pulled from a clogged drainge pipe. Even after the roots were out, the drainage pipe remained clogged,,and Waltz and his men kept probing. They found another 20-foot mass of fibers. The roots apparently belong to a willow tree. "Roots hve almost an intelligence for locating pipes," Waltz explained.. "They'll grow down to a pipe, then go'. longitudinally along the pipe until they finally locate a crack. Finally, a little spear the size of a hair on your head will work into the pipe," he said. IMAGEC5 Ann Arbor's Cornerstone of Beauty IiAIQ n' COMQ\NJY Why go to the corner drug store when you can come to our professional beauty salon and purchase professional products such as, " KMS Nucleoprotein I Jhirmack If you're not in technology yet, think it over. If you are in technology, talk to Texas Instruments. Campus Interviews Oct. 5-6,11, 24-25, Nov 14-15 See what TIis doing in: Send for the 34-page picture story- of TI people and places. " Microcomputers and microprocessors . Semiconductor memories " Linear semiconductor devices " Microelectronic digital watches " Calculators e Minicomputers: hardware, software and systems featuring software compatibility with microprocessors " Distributed computing systems " Electronic data terminals " Programmable control systems " Data exchange systems " Advanced Scientific Computers - 'Digital seismic data acquisition systems " Air traffic control radar and Discrete Address Beacon Systems " Microwave landing systems " Radar and infrared systems " Guidance and controls for tactical missiles " Worldwide geophysical services " Clad metals for automotive trim, thermostats, and electrical contacts " Interconnection products for elec- tronic telephone switching systems * Temperature-sensitive controls fo7 automobiles and appliances n Keyboards for calculators and for many other products Write: George Berryman, Texas Instruments Corporate Staffing, P. O. Box 225474, M. S. 67, Dept. CG, Dallas, Texas 75265