,Jorge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February G, 1976 age Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 6,, 1976 0 111 THE COMIC OPERA GUILD OFFEN BACH'S PRESENTS BELLE OPERETTA IN ENGLISH FEBRUARY 4,5,6,7 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE EVENINGS: $3.50 MATINEE: $2.50 TICKET INFORMATION: 763-1085 A College deree.- and no plans?' Become a Lawyer's Assistant and put your education to work. If you will soon be receiving your degree and entering a job market which has not yet met your high hopes. . . . Here's your invitation to another opportunity: The new world of the legal assistant. You can be trained to be a skilled member of a top legal team with the potential for an outstanding and active career. DELONG'S BAR-B-Q-PIT 314 DETROIT ST. RIBS (Our Specialty), SHRIMP, SEAFOOD CH ICKEN-Bar-B-Q and Fried All Dinners include Fries, Slaw & Bread Hypnosis: The key to solving all your perso nal problems? Mon., Wed., Th., Sun. 11 -2 Fri., Sat. 11 -3 665-2266 Pickups Delivery APRIL 15 DEADLINE 27 Italian Medical and 9 Veterinary Schools Accept American Students Medical and veterinary school aspirants who are thinking of ap- plying to Italian medical schools, and their families, must act immediately. New Italian government regulations require that pre- inscription applications be filed with the Italian Embassy in Wash., D.C., and Italian Consulates, before April 15, for consideration for medical and veterinary school admission in the fall of 1976. 27 distinguished Italian medical schools accept Americans. Several hundred Americans now are studying at Italian medical and veterinary schools. All applications must reach the Italian Embassy and Consulates before April 15. Medical, dental and veterinary school aspirants who need assistance in language and cultural orientation, and preparation before, during and after medical school to enable the practice of medicine in the U.S., should contact the Institute of International Medical Education. The Institute has helped more American men and women enter European medical and veterinary schools than any other organization. Of the approximately 40,000 premeds and graduate students who will apply toAmerican medical schools this year, about 35% will be accepted. Contact Student Information Office. INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL EDUCATION Provisionally chartered by the Regents of the University of the State of NewYork 40 E. 54 St., New York 10022 " (212) 832-2089 By LISA PINKOS "Yot eyes feel very thick .--. You want to close your eyes ... you're going deeper and deep- er and deeper...- Hypnotist Doug Beltz uses these familiar phrases to man- ipulate his clients into what he calls "a state of heightened sug- gestability" at the Ann Arbor Hypnosis Center. BELTZ SAYS that he achiev- es a 60 to 70 per cent success rate in the treatment of such problems as smoking, insomnia, migraine headaches, drug ad- diction, phobias and obesity. On the average, a patient must visit the center five times at a cost of $25 per visit to achieve the desired result. Beltz describes hypnosis as "a state of mind whereby your own emotions hook onto an idea. "THERE IS no power in the' hypnotist. There is no power in hypnosis," be added, dispel- ling the myth that hypnosis is a mystical process. In the first session, B e I t z determines "the emotional re- sponse to the problem" through a questionnaire or an interview. The remainder of the visits are devoted to the actual hypnasis. Beltz indicated he aims "pri-, marily toward the reduction of tension to build a sense of con- fidence within the patient." TOM THOMAS, a former client who wanted to be able to relax more said, "I learned a technique that helps in the re- laxation process then I let my- self get into it quickly and en- joyed the experience." One of the methods used at the Hypnosis Center is t h e "eye fixation technique" in which, "the patient stares at the center of the disc and the eye muscles become tired through strain," according to Beltz. The subject "is no longer thinking logically but in the here and now while I ramble on and on. When they're thinking less logically, they're open to suggestions," he explained. "THE MOST unusual case," Beltz continuer, "was when a fellow came in who lost his wal- let while smoking pot. I did an age regression to find the wal- let but the patient only went back to having the perceptions one can read a book and call of being stoned." himself a hypnotist." The hypnotic state has s i x UNIVERSITY Psychology Pro- levels. In these stages, t h e fessor, Dr. Howard Wolowitz, subject may experience almost criticized Beltz's methods, say- all hypnotic phenomena includ- ing, "Hypnosis only suprasses ing hallucinations, emotional al- the problem. A patient may get teration and age regression. immediate relief but the s a d "Most people reach s t a g e thing is that in a sense, they're three or four and 20 per cent trying to escape." will reach stage five and six," Wolowitz shunned hypnosis on Beltz said. the grounds that it is incomplete "THE HYPNOTIC suggestion therapy. "It doesn't deal with will last longer in the deeper the heart of the problem," he stages. I'm working strictly for said. long term results," he added. When asked to comment on Beltz, who was trained at the hypnosis centers in general, Dr. Hypnosis Training Center in Wolowitz, who is also a consult- Oak Park and the American In- ing psychologist for the state stitute of Hypnosis in Los An- said, "My impression is t h a t geles held, "Hypnosis will not they have to advertise to get hurt somebody. There are some clients. You never see a psy- cases in which hypnosis would chiatrist or a psychologist with be an ineffective or an inap- an ad in the paper because it propriate thing to do but I al- isn't ethical. ways get a medical form from "I see it as a business rather the patient's doctor to verify than a practice," he said. "I that the illness is not organic." wo'iid only recommend a hyp- Who is qualified to practice nosis center to someone who the process? Beltz said, "There wants to avoid dealing with is no licensing in Michigan. Any- problems." Summ er job outlook uninspiring a Specialize in Corporations, Employee Estates, Trusts and Wills, Litigation, Estate and Mortgages. Benefits, or Real For a free brochure about this career opportunity call 516/294-8700, Ext. 7604-5, or simply mail the coupon below. ---------------------------- Name --_Phone____ Address_ State Zip _ I The RFD Boys Bluegrass Music at the Pretzel Bell Every Fri. & Sat.-10:00 p.m. THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC PRESENTS I L'J~tto "re bit 'olbat (A Soldier's Tale) by IGOR STRAVINSKY Q Summer 1976 June 7-Aug. 27 E Q Spring 1976 Mar. 16-Sept. 2 A .1_1_L DAY Q Fall 1976 Sept. 27-Dec. 17 EVENING Q Fall 1976 Sept. 14-Mar. 5, 1977 i i i r Decorate with the sophisticated artistry of tribal cultures " TEXTILE ART from three continents. * ORIGINAL JEWELRY DESIGNS in imported beads & silver. baoab FOLK ART GALLERY 123 West Washington, Ann Arbor, Mi. 662-3681 By BARBARA ZAHS 4 Ann Arbor's chilly tempera- tures are making everyone dream ahead to the warm, sun- filled days of summer - and that includes thinking about summer employment. "It's never too early to start looking," says Howard B a r- ricklow, Assistant Director of the Michigan Employment Se- curity Commission's (MESC) Ann Arbor office. BUT BARRICKLOW expres- sed fears that depressed eco- nomic conditions will make this summer'sjob prospects no more promisisg than those of the I Appearing at CHANCES ARE ONE NIGHT ONLY SUNDAY FEBRUARY 8 Mail to: ~L~ I URuth Goldsmith A P I ELawyer's Assistant Program ADELPHI UNIVERSITY University College IN COOPERATION WITH Division of Special Programs THE NATIONAL CENTER Adelphi University FOR PARALEGAL TRAINING Garden city. N.Y. 11530 CP71 A Musical Drama Performed in English I HOURS: TUES.-FRI. 12-9 SATURDAYS 10-6 { February 6-7-8:30 P.M. February 8--3:00 P.M. Trueblood Auditorium GENERAL ADMISSION $2.00 Tickets available at UAC Ticket Central lo- cated in the Hill Auditorium Box Office. A portion of the proceeds will go to the Scholarship Fund. 4past two years. "We're really not sure yet, but the picture looks very bleak," he said. "MANY businesses are hav- ing trouble just keeping their regular staff employed," e x- plains Barricklow. The MESC foresees at least a 10 per cent unemployment rate in the Ann Arbor area this summer. Throughout the rest of the state, the jobless figures are expectedto be somewhat higher. Skills and past experience may play a part in determining a student's success in obtain- ing a job, but individual init- iative and determination will be far more important according to Barricklow. Ann Cooper, Summer Place- meit Coordinator for the Uni- versity's Career Planning and Placement Office, agrees. "If you really dig, you can find something," she insists. She advises students to "be prepared to take any job, even if it's not exactly what you want." ACCORDING to Cooper, camps, resorts, and national narks will probably offer stu- dents most employment oppor- tunities this year. Positions in summer internshin programs will also be Plentiful. . Students who want to work in the Ann Arbor area this sum- mer may have a difficult time finding employment because lo- cal businesses cannot absorb the influlx of new workers. "You've got to be willing to move around," says Cooper, "even if that means looking in another city or state." THE EARLY conclusion of the University's winter term may give students here an advantage over students from other col- leges and universities in the state, most of which will not finish until June. Often, employ- ers want workers to be avail- able during the entire four- month period from May 1 throyigh Labor Day. Most of the job openings fund this slmmer will be on a f"l-time b t temporary basis and nay is likely to start at aho-t $2.20 an hour. I ANN ARBOR PREMIERE THE OTHER HALF OF THE SKY: A CHINA MEMOIR This film by Shirley MacLaine and Claudia well is about the first Women's Delegaton to the People's Republic of China. The delegation-a Southern black civil rights worker, a Calfornia teenager, a Texas housewife, a Navajo social worker, a New England Republican, . a Puerto Rican sociologist, the four woman technicl crew and MacLaine-talk with Chinese women about their lives and values One part of the film even demonstrates the use of acupuncture during a Caesarean section; the mother eats apples and waves to the camera during surgery. "As an introduction to this alien culture whose revolution has effected remarkable change in a mere 25 years, THE OTHER HALF OF THE SKY is perhaps the purest and most frankly emotional exploration I've seen."-Marjorie Rosen, MS. Magazine SATURDAY, FEB. 7-7 & 9 P.M.-$1.50 RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER The filmmaker, CLAUDIA WEIL, will speak after both shows SPONSORED BY: The women's Program Coordinator, The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative, The Department of English, The Women's Film Festival Committee, International women's Year You should know a good deal when you see oneV. vitL I WE DO ... So we of fer you the o... _:,4. 0 BE ST BA RGAINS in non-perscription HEALTH CARE PRODUCTS TAMIN year 100'round. table-, US.: : : Why? -- Because we like £UL V- -