Thursday,.Moy 22, 1975 THE MCHiGAN DAILY Page Three Thrsa, a 2,195THEMIHGA AIYPaeThe Psychic swears by mindhealing By CINDY HILL "Anyone who heals without Stern Morgan is an affable love, well, I'd swy it would nev- man, modest and congenial. In er be a permanent thing," he appearance you might call him muses. "strikingly ordinary," if the MORGAN'S diagnosis usually description weren't an obvious takes abot 20 minutes. He contradiction of terms. slowly moves his hands several He's a far cry from the type inches over the patient's body. most people would imagine as a Patients sometimes claim "psychic healer," a species that they feel senstions of heat elicits arcane images of mystic from his hands. Others feel his rites and pentacles from most hands vibrating, although they people. are always motionless. BUT Morgan, who has worked "There's nothing magic in the at the University for 20 years, hands," Morgan assures his pa- says his ability is anything but tients, "you do the healing your- mysterious, or even unique. self." "It all comes from the sub- WHATEVER the method, conscious - and everybody's Morgan claims he has had con- got a subconscious, " he says. siderable success in this unus- While faith healers attribute ual field. He has "cured" mala- their abilities to God, and other dies ranging from the common healers might attribute their cold to cancer. powers to themselves, Morgan He is by no means alone in claims that all healing comes these claims: Morgan possesses from the subconscious of the a folder full of letters from for- individuals involved. mer patients who attest to his MORGAN says all he does is skills. help people contact their own One patient, a high state of- subconscious. ficial, openly praises Morgan's The only other element con- talent. For 12 years he had suf- tributing to the healing process fered from a painful case of is love. "A true healer has love chronic ulcerative colitis. and compassion for his fellow HE SAYS that Morgan's work, man," says Morgan. On this which has healed the ulcers, point, the practical, down-to- was "phenomenal." earth healer becomes almost Although he admits the dis- mystical. See HEALING, Page 6 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS STERN MORGAN, a psychic healer and University staff member, takes the hand of a younger patient before "scanning" her for illness. Morgan says the subconscious can heal any illness, and effects cures by helping the individual make contact with his or her own subconscious. Student could get -p - . .--msa empty Regent seat r By BILL TURQUE A new law allowing the gover- tor to make student appoint- ients to controlling boards of educational institutions presents the very real possibility that a student could be chosen to succeed University Regent Law- rence L i n d e m e r (R-Stock- bridge). Lindemer will be leaving the Board on June 1 to fill a va- camcy on the State Supreme Court, WIIIE IN Ann Arbor last ii, Governor William Milli- k'n said he was "in no way dis- couraged" by the State Senate's r tection of Thomas Korpi, his student nominee to the Mich- igan 'Technological University (MTU) Board of Control. Korpi's nomination was turn- ed back by the Senate in a 22-11 s-te on May 15, amid charges he lacked sufficient maturity for the job. The governor's ap- pointment to the- University Board of Regents would not be subject to Senate approval. While Milliken said he had nat yet given serious considera- tion to a successor for Linde- mer, he indicated he would cer- tainly consider student appoint- ments for such positions. A SPOKESMAN for the gov- ernor said the list of prospec- tive appointees w a s "quite lengthy, more than a dozen names." He added that "it is certainly within the realm of possibility that there are stu- dents on the list" Korpi's nomination to MTU's Board of Control had rough go- ing through the Senate because of h i s threatened reprisals against the editor of the school's paper, Stephen R o t h. Roth wrote a series of editorials op- posing Korpi's nomination. Roth said yesterday he op- posed Korpi's nomination be- cause of his questionable record as an officer of MTU's student government, and because his major qualification seemed to be that he "was a buddy of the governor's.' ROTH DESCRIBED Korpi as a "solid Rep'tblican" who had worked for Milliken's re-election last fall. According to Roth, Korpi was displeased with the lack of pub- lic support the school's news- paper, "The Tech Lode," was giving to his nomination. "Ile catse into our offices one day and asked me if I wanted to graduate," said Roth. "I thought he was joking, but then I realized he was serious." ROTH SAID Korpi also issued a press release onstudent gov- ernment stationary announcing procedings were underway for Roth's recall as editor of The Lode, something which Roth called "a bunch of hogwash." Korpi was unavailable for com- ment last night. Roth added that Korpi has attempted to link him with a number of questionable activi- ties, including alleged incidents of firebombing, which Roth in- sists are complete fiction. "I'm really gong-ho about a s t u d e n t appointment to our board," said Roth. "But Korpi was just a bad number, and to appoint him would have been a mistake," ROTH SAYS he thinks the University is in an ideal posi- tion to have a student regent, because the potential for public pressure on the governor's of- fice is greater. "You guys are a little closer to the action down there," said Roth, a business major at the 5,000 student institution -near Marquette. One student who has express- ed interest in the Regent seat here is unsuccessful Student Government C un cil(SGC) presidential candidate Candice Massey. Massey has been lob- bying for the job in Lansing, talking with state legislators See STUDENT, Page 5 Riding a mile for a camel This Saudi Arabian camel is getting a free ride. There is so much oil money in Saudi Arabia these days that even the camels don't have to w alk. Zairians abduct local woman doing research in Tanzania By ELAINE FLETCHER Jane Goodall, since last Feb- he added. With wire service reports ruary, on a researgh grant from Stanford University. EYEWITNESS reports s ai d An Ann Arbor woman was one the raiders arrived at the re- of four persons kidnapped Mon- According to Smuts' brother, search station by boat and left day when an armed band of "nobody has received word the same way. rebels from the nearby country from the kidnappers," about the The U.S. Embassy in Dar es of Zaire raided a Tanzanian safety of the vitims. He also Salaam has asked the Tanzan- wildlife research center on the said "there has been no ni inn government to investigate shores of Lake Tanganyika. cation one way or the other" of the kidnappings, while the U.S. Barbara Smuts of 4011 Thorn- pssible motives for the kidnaps Embassy in Zaire has notified oaks Drive was one of three ping or whether the Africans that country's would egotiae focountry'sntsgovernment in Stanford University s t u d e nts would negotiate for the students case the students had been captured by the group which, release, taken across the border. according to Smuts' brother, Isolated from outside assist- A third year behavioral stu- Malcolm, "is a group of politi- ance, "most people in the re- dies major, Smuts had been do- cal rebels." search center got away by just iisg research at the center on scattering into the jungle," said wild chimpanzees. Her parents, SMUTS. HAD been in the S m u t s' brother. "Apparently who are preparing for a trip to Tanzanian station headed by the they (the kidnappers) just grab- Tanzania, were unavailable for widely acclaimed anthropologist bed whoever they could find," comment,