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March 12, 1981 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1981-03-12

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The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 12, 1981-Page 3

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*Symposium
on stress starts
with a scream

By ANNETTE STARON
Fed up with midterms, papers, and threatening budget
cutbacks? Join other victims of stress on the Diag at noon
today and scream.
Students, faculty members, and community residents are
expected to gather to help kick off a free six-day symposium
on "Stress in the University" by joining in a communal
scream to "blow off some steam," according to symposium
co-coordinator Sally Talpos.
UNIVERSITY CHEERLEADERS will lead cheers, clowns
will entertain spectators, and hundreds of helium-filled
balloons will be released - each bearing a note detailing an
individual's stress - to throw inner tensions to the winds.
The symposium, jointly sponsored by the Office of the Vice
President for Student Services and the Rackham School of
Graduate Studies, is the first of its kind at the University.
The symposium is designed to "help us all cope with
stress," according to Talpos. "'Stress is a common factor to
everyone in the University community," she added.
JUDGING FROM THE response symposium organizers

have received, the community agrees.
Between Spring Break, when flyers advertising the event
were first sent out, and Monday, more than 300 individual
registration forms had been returned. Many of them con-
tained registrations for more than one of the 47 free
workshops, Talpos said.
Most workshops are open to the public on a walk-in basis.
"WE DIDN'T EXPECT this kind of response," Talpos
said, adding that she regretted some people were closed out
of the pre-registration workshops. "We could have filled
some of the workshops three times," she said.
One of the goals of the symposium is to present faculty
members and administrators with research about stress,
how environment affects learning, how instructors create
stress, and how they can alleviate it.
Symposum organizers hope the workshops will help the
community cope with stress. "The community is only as good
as its support system," Talpos said.
All those conducting workshops are members of the Ann
Arbor community - most are University staff members or
students.

Be an angel .
Read be Mid f
764-0558

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Bull rampages MSU
EAST LANSING (UPI) - A half-ton bully, knocking down a female student
Angus bull went on a rampage yester- who saw him but was apparently too
day at Michigan State University, startled to move. The unidentified
smashing a police car, bowling over a student was not hurt, authorities said.
student and causing general mayhem Other students coming out of classes
until officers corralled him. ran around the bull, hampering police
It turned out, apparently, that the efforts to tail the animal and find a
bull was homesick. place to trap him.
"I GUESS HE just didn't like it East Lansing police and campus
here,:' said Marshall William, manager security, not used to such roundups,
of MSU's Livestock Pavilion, after the finally cornered the wayward bull near
1%-hour rampage was over. "I just tennis courts by employing cruisers
took him home because he was upset." and a school tow truck.
The rambunctious, 1,100-lb. bull - Undaunted, the bull leaped over two
valued at $5,000 - was on the MSU campus squad cars and caused several
campus for an Angus Show and Sale hundred dollars in damage.
planned for this weekend. "I wasn't too scared," said Officer.
He escaped while being transferred Ken Hall, whose car was vaulted by the
from one trailer to another, dragging a bull. "I was inside the car and deter-
herdsman 60 feet and beginning an mined to stay there."
odyssey that took him around the entire The bull finally was cornered, a
campus, police said. second time and convinced to go
AT ONE POINT, the bull turned quietly.
-HAPPENINGS -
FILMS
Cinema II - Open City; Lorch Hall Aud., 7 p.m.; The Asphalt Jungle, 9
p.m.
Cinema Guild - 19th Annual Ann Arbor Film Festival: 7, 9, 11 p.m., Mich.
Theatre (all different shows).
Mediatrics - The 39 Steps; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 p.m.; The Wrong Man, 9 p.m.
CREES - 39 Leagues from Home; disc: 200 Lane Hall, 7:30 p.m.
SPEAKERS
Urban Planning - Jim Crowfoot, "Citizen Participation in Planning," 11
a.m., 1040 Dana.
CJS - Bag lunch, William Steslicke, "National Health Insurance: The
Japanese Experience," noon, Lane Hall Commons.
S. & S. E. Asian Studies - Tom Loeb, "Thailand: The Kampuchean
Question," 1:30 p.m., Lane Hall Commons.
Chem. Engin. - Roger Schmitz, "The Strange World of Chemical
Oscillations and Catastrophes," 4 p.m., 2084 E. Engin.
Romance Lang, - Paul Bamford, "Menard, Quain, and Borges: Three
Theoreticians," 4 p.m., MLB 4th floor Commons.
MDRTC - Rolf Luft, "Somatostatin Hormone and Neprotransmitter,"
4:15 p.m., 2901 Taubman Library.
Union of Students for Israel - Ze'ev Schiff, "The Soviets and the Middle
East,"8 p.m., UGLI Multipurp. Room.
Hispanic Lee. Ser. - Manual Maldonado Denis, "The Puerto Rican
Migration: Historical Perspectives," 4 p.m., Res. Col. Aud.
Ctr. Western Eur. Studies - Jane Caplan, "Did the Nazi State Exist?" 4
p.m., East Conf. Rm. Rackham.
Biology - Bruce Chib, "An Immortal Cell Strain from Pat Epidermics,"
noon, 1139 Nat. Sci.
MDRTC - Rolf Luft, "Pathogenesis of Type II Diabetes," noon, S6450
Main Hosp. Amph.
Chemistry - Paul Hunt, "Semiclassical & Quantum Mechanical Collision
Induced Dissociation," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.
Campus Weight Watchers - 5:30 p.m., League Project Room.
Chemistry - Ronald Hoffman, "Theoretical Organometallic Chemistry,"
8 p.m., 1300 Chem.
MEETINGS
Med. Ctr. Bible Study -12:30 p.m., F2230 Mott Library.
Sociology - 4 p.m., League Henderson Room, (for prospective concen-
trators).
Inter-Varsity Christian Fell. - 7 p.m., League, Union.
Chi Alpha Christian Fell. -7 p.m., 126 East Quad.
AA -8:30 p.m., N2815 U. Hosp. (2nd Level, NPI).
RESOLVE - 7:30 p.m., Wesley Foundation ounge, 602 E. Huron.
WC-CHPC - National Health Planning, 7:30 p.m., Wash. County Road
Commission, 555 N. Zeeb Rd.
Ann Arbor Alliance - 7:30 p.m., 2nd floor meeting rm., Fire Dept. Hqt.,
111N. 5th Ave.
Bio. Sci. - 4:30 p.m., 3056 Nat. Sci., Open house for potential concen-
trators.
Min. Task Force -8 p.m., Trotter House, Open forum for minority studen-
ts, staff, faculty on enrollment retention and cutbacks.
PERFORMANCES
Guild House - Poetry reading, Terry Becker, Shelton Johnson, Marilyn
Basel, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Canterbury Loft - "The Caretaker,"8 p.m., 332 S. State.
PTP/Theatre & Drama - "All the Way Home," 8 p.m., Frieze Trueblood
Theatre.
UAC - Soundstage Coffeehouse, 8 p.m., Union U. Club.
Ark - Rich & Maureen DelGrosso, good time music, 1421 Hill St.

AMC production - Multi-media rock concert, "Everything's turning
Gray," p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre.
MISCELLANEOUS
A-V Serv. - A Dose of Reality, Hospice, 12:05p.m., SPH II Aud.
Computing Ctr. - Chalk Talk, "How to Read an Assembly Dump," 12:10
p.m., 1011 NUBS.
International Night - Ireland, 5 p.m., League Cafeteria.
SWE - Schlumberger Wells, 7 p.m., 229 W. Engin.
Rudrananda Ashram - Hatha Yoga Class, level 2, first of a six-week
class, 7:30 p.m., 640 Oxford.

What could be better than 1 day
of spectacular savings at
Highland's Audio Sale?

The Highland

2-Day Sale.

This Friday and Saturday! 10 am to 9 pm
HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE MANY HI-Fl BARGAINS

TECHNICS SA202
AM/FM RECEIVER
30-watts per channel min. RMS,
from 30-20,000 Hz. No more than
0.04% THD. While 200 last chain-
wide. Regular $157. Save!
$127

METAL TAPE COMPATIBLE

FLUROSm METER

1#

SHARP RT1O METAL
TAPE CASSETTE DECK
Cassette deck uses standard or
metal tapes. LED peak level
display. Dolby noise reduction.
Regular $108.88. Save!
$7981

PIONEER SX3600
AM/FM RECEIVER
30-watts per channel min. RMS,
from 20-20,000 Hz. No more than
0.05% THD. Save on this deluwe
receiver. Regular $199.

MITSUBISHI AM/FM
8-TRACK CAR STEREO
8-track car stereo features
1-touch program selector, AM/
FM pushbuttons, locking fast for-
ward. In-dash. #RS67. Reg. $119.
$97
MAXELL PACK OF 4
CASSETTE TAPES
Pack of 4 Maxell 90-min. Ultra
dynamic blank cassette tapes
with tape deck care kit. Big
savings! UD90GFTPK4. Reg. $19.88
99 PACK

KENWOOD LSK2008
SPEAKER SYSTEM
2-way air suspension speakers
system has 8" woofer, 112" twe-
eter. Handles up to 40 watts.
Woodgrain cabinet. Reg. $59.88.

RTR III MODEL 4
SPEAKER SYSTEM
4-way speaker system with 12"
woofer, 3%" midrange, 2/a" twe-
eter, 31!2" supertweeter. Wood-
grain cabinet. Reg. $119 each.
094 EA.

KENWOOD K01600
TURNTABLE BUY
Semi-automatic, belt-drive
turntable. Resin-concrete base.
Straight tone arm with dust
cover. Regular $119.

$38g46

EA

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