Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom E I I Mtc1t3an l3lalig STANDARD High today will be in the low to mid-30s with a chan- ce of flurries in the mor- ning. _w- Vo. XCII No.71 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, December 5, 1981 Ten Cents Eight Pages "I. With hypnosis, test woes can disappear like magic By PAM FICKINGER The audience is quiet. On the stage, a man in a tuxedo slowly swings a gold watch on a long chain in front of his awe-struck victim. "Your eyelids are getting heavy, you feel sleepy, veeerrrrry sleepy," he says. "You feel relaxed. As I count to five, you will fall into a deep, deep sleep, but you will hear my voice and respond to my every command. One, two, you're falling into a deep sleep, three, four, five." THIS SCENE sounds very familiar. It's the first image that may come to one's mind when the word "hypnosis" is mentioned. But the watch-and-chain method is the only one used by magicians. Though magicians may claim to use hypnosis to compel people to act like chickens or to reveal their deepest and darkest secrets, true professional hyp- notists say their craft can help people to combat some very real problems. In addition to fighting smoking or eating habits, hypnosis can be used to help students to overcome their anxiety before finals, hypnotists say. LAST WEDNESDAY, a seminar was held in the Michigan League entitled "Test Success Seminar." The purpose of the seminar, according to sponsor Terri White, was to help students, through the use of hypnosis, improve study skills and memory of material, reduce anxiety in test situations, and gain a greater sense of confidence of their test-taking abilities. WHITE, A registered nurse with a masters in psychotherapy, has recently been working in the area of "hyp- notherapy." The Ann Arbor resident said there is no better place to hold seminars of this type than in a college town. White received her training from a friend who is also involved in hyp- notherapy. "It's an apprenticeship kind of thing," she said. "There's no 'school for hypnotists' that you can go to." ABOUT 10 people attended the seminar. At the onset, White introduced herself and promised that she wouldn't make the participants "act like chickens." She then explained the hyp- nosis process the group would be ex- periencing that evening. Hypnosis is a process in which the unconscious part of the mind is opened up for suggestion, White explained. During this time, the conscious part of the mind is still aware of what's going on but it's "taking a little vacation," she said. Prof. Jesse Gordon, of the School of Social Work, said "people are trained in logical, orderly thinking; their capacities in creative thinking are greatly suppressed." He said hypnosis allows the mind to be creative. See HYPNOSIS, Page 5 aily rnoto Dy KIm M ILL AT THE TEST Success Seminar, Terri White hypnotized Michael Kubacki, telling him he would be successful in a test situation and would be confident of his abilities to study and remember material. Reagan concerned about Libyan. 'it team' WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan personally expressed concern yesterday over intelligence reports that a terrorist squad trained in Libya has entered the United States on a mission to assassinate him or other government leaders. A day earlier, Reagan personally or- dered Secret Service escorts for his three top aides. Security officials, who have taken the purported threat seriously for more than a week, already had tightened the protection of the president, Vice President George Bush and Cabinet officials. THESE OFFICIALS are known to be concerned about the possibility of an armed attack against the president or an attempt to blow up his plane with a surface-to-air missile. There also are fears that terrorists might try to hit his armored limousine with a rocket- propelled grenade or some other projectile. "Obviously, you have to be concerned about all the people that have been named in this," Reagan said, referring to published reports that a five-man "hit team" from Libya was already on See REAGAN, Page 2 State forced to close student loan program By JULIE HINDS The State Direct Student Loan Program ran out of money yesterday, but officials predicted the program's shutdown will have little effect on University students. The SDSL program, which provides Guaranteed Student Loans to students unable to find a commercial lender, is officially closed and will no longer ac- cept applications for the 1981-82 academic year, according to Lee Pat- erson, deputy director of the state's financial aid program. THE STATE WILL continue loans to students who applied before yester- day's closing date until funds run out. When funds are no longer available, rejected applications will be returned to the students, Peterson said. However, the University expects all of its 3500 applicants to be approved for loans, totalling roughly $10,000,000, ac- cording to Director of the University Office of Financial Aid Harvey Grotrian. "We don't expect any applications to be returned," Grotrian said. The University was notified 24 hours before the SDSL program shutdown, said Lynn Borset, associate director of the financial aid office. Approximately one hundred applications were rushed to the SDSL office in Lansing to meet the deadlines, Borset said. STUDENTS WHO already have been granted an SDSL loan will not be affec- ted, Borset added. The loans, available to undergraduates and graduates, average $3,000 per academic year, Bor- set said. See STUDENT, Page 2 MSU cuts funds to alumni group- EAST LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan State University Board of Trustees voted yesterday to cut off the school's in- dependent-minded alumni association, ignoring warnings the move could damage MSU's image and affect state ap- propriations. The 6-2 vote - which also called for creation of a univer- sity-controlled alumni program - was the culmination of a running, two-year battle which began in 1979 after the con- troversial Cecil Mackey became president of Michigan's largest public university. THE VOTE demonstrated the strong support Mackey en- joys on the board. The consequences for this financially ailing alumni association were not immediately known although East Lan- sing Sen. William Sederberg - who strongly opposed the disfranchisement move - said he believes the group will "continue the best it can." The resolution adopted by the board severs all relations between the university and the 32,000-member association from representing MSU in any fashion. JOHN BRUFF, chairman of the board of trustees, said the move resulted from the inability of the association to work out an operating agreement with the university. He said the group was not working in the university's best interest. Don Borgeon of the alumni association, however, charged the trustees were not interested in settling the dispute. The fight between the alumni association and the MSU ad- ministration first came to a boil when the group's president, Jack Kinney, refused Mackey's request to resign. SINCE THEN, the college has discontinued the. association's annual subsidy and denied it access to vital computerized records for mailings to alumni. The association has irked MUS officials, 'in turn, by running critical articles in its magazine. In negotiations, the association had said Kinney would resign and offered the MSU administration a say in selection See MSU, Page 3 Galens Tag Day The downtown streets are busier than usual today. People wearing red ponchos and carrying buckets filled with red and green tags are asking passersby for donations to help the children at Mott Children's Hospital have a Merry Christmas. Student Legal Services loses VISTA staff By BETH ALLEN Student Legal Services, already trying to cope with the loss of three staff members earlier this fall, will lose two more staff workers by the end of the month when their VISTA contracts ex- pire. The two workers are full-time staff members of the Center for Housing Reform, which has worked closely with SLS since 1975. They, as were the three staff members who lost their jobs earlier, are volunteers in VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America), a federal agency modeled after the Peace Corps which operates domestically in- stead of abroad. THE VISTA program has been targeted for elimination by the Reagan administration. The VISTA workers are not officially staff members of SLS, because their salaries are paid by a grant from VISTA. SLS Director Jonathan Rose said there is "a lot of interplay" bet- ween the VISTA staff and SLS in organizing tenants' rights groups and drafting tenants' rights legislation. The threat of eventual discontinuance of VISTA coupled with a new set of VISTA guidelines has made VISTA's housing reform work less effective, ac- cording to Guzmich. "THE GUIDELINES have really cut down on your ability to accomplish long-range change," said Guzmich, who has worked both to organize and to draft housing legislation since she joined the housing reform project last spring. VISTA worker Dave DeVarti, whose contract expired in November but who is still active with the office, agreed that the restructured VISTA "doesn't want to see VISTA (volunteers) at demonstrations or organizing people," DeVarti said. Both DeVarti and Guzmich have tur- ned to the legislative side of the housing reform project to work on issues such as encouraging landlords to make their units more energy efficient and net- working with state and national organizations to creat a lobbying force, particularly in the state legislature. In addition, the VISTA workers have written books and articles about housing reform, served as consultants to the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, helped research economic conditions essential to SLS in drafting legislation, and helped institute a do-it-yourself court case kit for landlord-tenant cases, ac- cording to Rose. Rose said that SLS and the VISTA workers were not surprised that their See SLS, Page 5 Guzmich ... hopes project continues ..:f... .... . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TODAY Designer beans D ESIGNER JEANS have inspired designer beans and if you're tired of Gloria Vanderbilt, what do you 'do about Gloria VanderBean? The promo- tional gimmick is the work of inventors Joe Greenfeld and his wife Diane, who said they want to sell nnmly it 111e hans tn nonnl who are siek of hearing about Those nasty Westerners China has forbidden its people to fall in love with foreigners or become friendly with them in an effort to put an end to wanton western ideas and romantic notions, reports from Shanghai said yesterday. Officials in Shanghai have confirmed for the first time the issuance of new regulations that attempt to minimize contacts between Chinese citizens and foreign residents. The regulations ap- pear to be part of a mounting effort by Vice Chairman Deng Xiaoping's government to top the influx of "decadent" t.Man s mnsie_ and rAmanticne otions. The no more. The "Christmas tree ship" pulled into port here Wednesday with 103,800 Douglas firs for the holiday season. Matson Naviation Co's S.S. Kauai unloaded its cargo of 173 refrigerated containers from the Pacific Northwest. The trees will be inspected by the state Department of Agriculture for pests, then picked up by retailers. Prices for firs here range upward from $25 a piece. Sixty-six con- tainers of Christmas trees arrived Saturday bound for outer islands, and 25 or 30 more containers are expected later in the month. rooms for the yuletide season except for the finishing touches of glitter and greenery. The decorations include a 15th century creche, a gift to the White House in the John- son era, which was set up in its traditional place in the East Room. Visitors also will be able to see Jamie Wyeth's oil and water color painting of the White House on a winter night which the Reagan's are reproducing for their Christ- mas cards. The painting is on loan from Wyeth. O I ;I I i