Friday, October 31, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Hday, October 31, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ., .. ., Delicatessen folds, bad business cited Esalen: Group therapy (Continued from Page 1) is set up so you do the discover- clients ranging from the Army had, chosen with their eyes ing for yourself," comments to the Memorex computer cor- WOULD REVAMP STUDENT GOVT. SGC puts new plan on ballot (Continued from Page 1) 1 "IT'S VERY simple," opined one of Dennison's landlords.' "He spends money faster than he makes it. And by the way," he warned, "if you want money from that guy, forget it-I'm first in line!" Employes of the restaurantsx seemed to share this attitude. A! former waitress, Julie Affeldt, recalls that "working there was getting to be a joke," due to the owner's alleged carelessness and neglect of the restaurants' facilities. By the end, she said, every-I thing was broken. They were: using plastic cups, plates andj silverware, and most of the food4 was being cooked in a micro- wave oven. "HE SEEMED to be a really lousy businessman," she said. "He kept spreading his money very thin, investing in a num- ber of wild schemes. After the bankruptcy, the employes be- con to re ll.., cnort di hnnoet+ j 1 the restaurants opened two years ago, they did very well. But in the past year, she con- tinned, two restaurants down the' street acquired liquor licenses which gave them the advantage of offering beer as well as corned beef. 'she also blamed the ernplo es. in part for the business failure. "The employes always had the impression that he was do-. ing something shifty, that he was engaging in other businessI ventures after he had already+ closed. Lederman. "THE HAND doesn't match. the face," exclaims one person, while another complains, "My hands were cold, and my heart was pounding." "..Good," retorts Silverman. "It'll warm your. hands." Another game begins in which partners touch the tops of their heads together, and leader Jan- et Lederman warns, "if they separate you'll die." Then Led- erman tells the partners to, BUT SUCH games are just a small part of the experience at the Esalen clinic itself, where a large variety of psycho-thera- peutic techniques are employed to make the participants exper- ience a total one. "There is no one method, no one approach to doing things" says Lederman. "We use the setting, the outdoors, and the spas too," she continues. i f poration. By GLEN ALLERHAND from the colleges lacking stu- sion, a convention seeking cam- "Instead of going to the Hyatt Looking ahead to fall term: dent governments. pus-wide representation will be house, for a convention boozing elections, Student Government Presently, SGC is predomi.. called to restructure student it up and getting it on with the Council (SGC) passed several sntly composed of undergradu-i government broads, they come down to motions last night in prepara- ate delegates from the literary Esalen to deal with problems tion for the vote. college. Earlier supporters of the con- such as a sales force that isn't Council approved a proposal Su th vention opposed proponents of together," explains Silverman. to put the Michigan Student As- contend of the measure te oppose boy of "And when the Army came for sembly (MSA) Plan on the bal- a drug and alcohol convention, lot. The plan was drawn up byI representative than the current: but at last week's Council meet- they even brought in helicop- representatives of various state: Under othcamroposa's ernmen ing, a compromise measure was ters." college governments over theCUnrtew opbsas te struck that will permit voting summer, in accordance with a' Council would be renamed theg However Silverman's com-!two-yer-ol d re tive. "Michigan Student Assembly." on both proposals. ments brought some negative responses from listeners who UNDER THE terms of the I IN OTHER action, Council, rersnaie IN OTHER action, SGC passed'I TE cin oni asserted, "You're lubricating proposed plan,representatives an amendment to its compiled members were introduced to the machines of the exploitersversity would be schoolsecteand from allswith code which will place a "con- Don House, a business student then."vestscolan colleges withsttioacnvto" s t u d e n t governments; MSA stitutional convention" proposal who is the probable replacement "I only relate to people," an- would assist in choosing those on the ballot. for Treasurer Elliot Chikofsky, swered Silverman. representatives u p o n request If voters approve the provi- whose final term ends today. gone bankrupt. Out of resent- stand back to back and "ima- though the clinic began in ment, they stole things," she gine you have been in a box for 1962 as a seminar house for ex- said. a year . . . and stre-e-etch!" perts in the field of psycho- therapy, it now draws a pre-! ALTHOUGH t h e bookkeeper THEN the group is instruct- dominance of laypersons who denied that Dennison had done ed to hum. They begin softly, pay up to $290 for a week of the anything unethical, she said that but soon fill the room with an Esalen experience" he was rather eccentric. "He enthusiastic roar. BUT BESIDES providing a enjoyed acting mysteriously to- "Ah, that felt good," says ;conducive atmosphere for ndi- ward the employes," she ob-' one woman, after the din has viduals .to look into their own served. died down. psyches, Esalen also services -- - "Whatever the gimmick is it the organizational hang-ups of 1 ', s 1 - The great white shark is re- sponsible for most human at- tacks, the tiger shark the second most, according to Warren Zeil- ler of the Miami Seaquarium. Halloween T G Merrill's times called Marauders, some-; Merrill's Raiders, g L' oLU ally suspect uisonest tLy -.---1U\14, on his part, and it really added were tough U.S. Infantryment to the dissatisfaction." who fought in World War II in A former bookkeeper for Den- the China-Burma-India theater nison was more sympathetic to under command of Brig. Gen. his plight. She noted that when Frank Merrill. THREE FOR ISRkEL We offer you three incredible experiences. 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