Page 2-Sunday, February 18, 1979-Jhe Michigan Daily SYMPOSIUM ON HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE USSR THE SOVIET PERSPECTIVE ON DISSENT FEB. 19-21, 1979 University of Michigan *Public is invited *Free admission MONDAY, FEB. 19 7:30 P.M. Encapsulation of the Year's Events JERRY GOODMAN, Director, National Conference on Soviet Jewry 8:30 P.M. The Effect of Pressures from the West DAVID CHUDINOVSKY, Columbia University Q TUESDAY, FEB. 20 7:30 P.M. Censorship in Soviet Liter IGOR YEFIMOV, Fiction Writer, Sov 8:30 P.M. Anti-Semitism in the Sovie ALLAN ALTER, Graduate Student inI University of Michig WEDNESDAY, FEB.21 7:30 P.M. Soviet Constitution and th Rights of the individual GEORGE GINSBURGS, Rutgers LawS ALL LECTURES IN RACKHAM AMPHITHE RACKHAM BUILDIh -. .I. .... ature and Media iet Emigre 1978 et Press History, gan e School Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG PSYCHOLOGIST AND HYPNOTIST Don Powell shows off his confusion disc to Daily staffer Dennis Sabo, who seems mesmerized by the hypnotic device. Suaggestionsecoe reality in camilusive state of hypno sits EATRE NGO l. f Coordinated by A KTSIA A K4L/SI ACTION FOR SOVIET JEWRY AND HUMAN RIGHTS 1 1 1VESITY&MccUSICAL8OCIETY present, By DENNIS SABO The swirling designs of the spinning disc gently pull at the mind. The tunnelling effect toys with the gentle balance of reality . .. numbing the senses . . . meting time. The illusion urges you to follow, leading you away from the present, away from the here and now. "We're so suggestive in an hypnotic state," Dr. Don Powell said as he stopped the confusion disc and seated himself behind his desk. "What we tell ourselves becomes reality. If we tell ourselves that cigarettes taste bad, they'll taste bad. If we tell ourselves to stop the intake of rich foods, we would lose weight." Powell is a practising hypnotist. His attempts to alter behaviors, using hypnosis, succeed where other therapy' fails. IN HIS SMALL Huron Tower office, the University professor explained how people are more apt to accept what they are told in an hypnotic, rather than a normal state. "We look at the mind in a duality; the conscious and the subconscious," Powell said. "The conscious mind is very critical. We tend to rationalize things. Whereas the subcon- scious mind, the hypnotic state, is very suggestive and ac- cepts inputs uncritically." In the state of heightened suggestibility, a patient is able to &make changes, psychological as well as physical, Powell said. Hypnosis can help persons to overcome test anxiety, quit cigarette smoking, as well as increasing stamina and performance in sports. Powell said he has helped several local athletes live up to their potential by having them con- centrate and relax in game situations. IN A RECENT study at St. Joseph's hospital i joliet, Ill., 28 out of 44 women were able to increase their breast size nearly two inches through hypnosis, Powell said. "In breast enlargement studies, the women changed their blood flow to the breast region," Powell said. He added ongoing studies using hypnosis to retard the growth of cancer have been successful. In the case of cigarette smoking, the subjects are imagine themselves as non-smokers with their bodies tar and nicotine. told to free of "IMAGES; somewhat like an implanted disc, will block out and prevent urges and the desire to smoke," he said. Powell, a specialist in educational psychology, has also been actively involved in using behavior modification to alter undesired behaviors. A licensed hypnotist, Powell became interested in hypnosis several years ago when he used the technique to overcome his phobia of speaking in front of large audiences. Powell refutes the common belief that hypnosis-can make persons do something against their wishes. "YOU CAN'T hypnotize someone into doing something; against their will to commit a murder or become sexually permissive," he said. Hypnosis can be traced back to Anton" Mesmer (as in mesmerize), a Vienna faith healer in the 1700's who touched people to cure their pains. Most medical experts at the time dismissed Mesmer as a charlatan. He wound up his career in group bathtub therapy - waving a wand and touching the water, Mesmer supposedly cured the tub's occupants. Sigmund Freud also used hypnosis until denouncing it when he adopted couch therapy. Hypnosis has gained popularity since the American Medical Association approved it as an anesthetic in 1958. It' has been used more recently in police interrogations to help persons recall details of crimes. Many people are hypnotized daily without realizing it. Powell said. White road lines on a long highway, drive or flashing and colorful television commercials can produce light trances, he said. Although further uses of hypnosis are still being explored, Powell admits hypnosis cannot cure any problem. "Hypnosis is not a panacea,' he said. "It doesn't cure everything, but for a lot of people, it has been proven to produce some remarkable results. WE ARE tOOKING FOR A FEW GOOD PEOPUE Wade. Tkr & FRoffoaeIInc: 25185 Goddard Road Taylor, Michigan 48180 313 - 291-5400 Edmond/ ErKineering, Inc. 1501 W. Thomas Bay City, Michigan 48706 517-686-3100 Granger Engineering, Inc. 314 Haynes St., Cadillac, MI 49601 616 - 779-9754 Impact 7595 Improved Planning Action 25185 Goddard Road Taylor, Michigan 48180 313 - 291-5400 CIVIL ENGINEERS, LAND SURVEYORS, MUNICIPAL AND PLANNING CONS U LTANTS EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, EMPLOYERS5 China launches extensive attack against Vietnamese (Continued from Page 1) bassador told a reporter he would not rule out asking for an emergency coun-. Daily Official Bulletin Sunday, February 18,1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT, 3209 $A B-763-4117 Menasha, Otsego, Mi. Openings for engineering students in elelc. and mech. fields. Position location is north of Kalamazoo. Further details avaialable. INTERVIEWS: Camp Maplehurst, Mi. Coed. Will interview Mon., Feb. 18 from 1-5. Openings include waterfront (WSD, arts, crafts, nature, sports, and many others. Register by phone or in person. Camp Tanuga, Mi. Coed. Will interview Wed., Feb. 21 from 1-5. Openings: waterfront (WSI), arts/craf- ts, sailing, tennis, nurse and cook. Register by phone or in person. National Music Camp, Interlochen, Mi. Will inter- view Thrs., Feb. 22 from 9-5. Openings: need staff with recreational background, instrumental music people, waterfront (WSD, arts/crafts age crew, and food maintenance. Register, by phone or in per- son. Camp Sea Gull, Mi. Coed. Will interview Friday, Feb. 23 from 1-5. All staff positions open at this time. Register by phone or in person. Camp Sequoia, New York. Coed. Will interview Mon., Feb. 26 from 9-5. Openings include arts/crafts, drama, riding instr. (Eng.), athletics, and others. Register by phone or in person. Monday, February 19,.1979 Daily Calendar Physics/Astronomy: G. Sterman, Institute for Advanced Study, "High Energy Behavior of Jet-And Lepton Pair Production," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. General Notice GRE Testing, Saturday, Feb. 24-If you have either already signed up to take the GRE Aptitude Test on Feb. 24 or would have liked to take the test i it were administered in Ann Arbor, would you kindly phone Mrs. Dettling, Secretary, Evaluation and Examinations Office (764-3498). cil meeting later. "It all depends on the situation," he said. Options open to the Security Council range from censure to the intervention of U.N. forces. The Vietnamese envoy delivered let- -ters to Waldheim and Bishara from Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nugyen Duy Trinh, which said in part: "ON 17 FEBRUARY, several infan- try divisions and Chinese artillery tanks backed by aviation launched a massive attack on the whole length of the Chinese-Vietnamese bor- der. . . and occupied numerous It added the Chinese had struck as far as six miles into Vietnamese territory. Trinh said this "'constitutes a threat to peace and security in Southeast Asia and the world." The Chinese supported the North. Vietnamese communists against the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese gover- nment in the Vietnam War. But old bor der and ethnic tensions between the two countries flared anew after the North Vietnamese toppled the Saigon gover- nment and reunited the country in 1975. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIX, No. 117 Sunday, February 18, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764 -5ti2. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard StrWet. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April 2 semesters) $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published.1Tuesday through YSaturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann dArbor; $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. ELECTION DIRECTORS NEEDED To organize and operate the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) elections of April 2-3-4. Requires one month of preparation. Experience helpful. *%.: A qh:4: F'& %V1n fF4 SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT CAMP SEQUOIA Located in the Catskill Mtns. in Upstate N.Y. Our 48th Year