Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 9, 1983 Exam anxiety sparks student horseplay (Continued from Page 1) IN BRIEF competitive nature of the University is partly to blame for the pressure during finals week. Although the LSA junior said she isn't too concerned with grades, there is still the feeling that you hope everyone else is having as much trouble as you are." "EVERY conversation you hear is about finals," she said. Becoming too preoccupied with studying however, can be hazardous to your health, according to University Senior Counselor Tom Morson. Studen- ts can become so overwhelmed by their study anxiety they begin to link their academic performance to their self esteem, he said. Students can put so much emphasis on their grades that marks begin to define their self worth, Morson said. An "A" paper means the student is an "A" person, and depression balloons as the grade drops. "FOR ME," said Markley RD Clarke Anderson, "this week has more impact on my grades than the rest of the semester." Despite the pressure, Anderson said it is important to keep exams in per- spective. "It's certainly important, but an hour exam is only an hour of time." Students also tend to abuse their bodies during final exams by eating junk food and drinking too much coffee, said Morson. Instead of surviving on Snickers and Cokes, Morson advises students to eat healthier snacks such as fruit or decaffinated drinks. Another problem is that students of- ten panic because of the unstructured study time and set unrealistic goals for themselves such as pledging to "study all the time," Morson said. To avoid this students should allot time for fun activities that will get them out of the dorm and help improve the quality of their work, he said. Morson also recommends that students find friends to study with and form an "academic swat team," in- stead of isolating themselves in a carrel at the library. Anxiety is "serious stuff. It's something people need to learn to deal with. They shouldn't dismiss it," said Morson. To help students cope with exam pressure Morson is running a stress workshop in the Union Monday from 4 to 6 p.m. I EMBLEMI Free Wrapping Paper With Purchase of $5.00 or more-. Michigan Sportswear, Glassware & G ifts. Ground Floor UNION STIMULANTS CA LL F UL L L IN E, RE E: 1-840-645-144 TABLETS & CAPSULES WRITE: STAY ALERT N. Babylonx 24 11703 Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Soviet Union silences armistalks GENEVA, Switzerland - The Soviet Union shut down all nuclear arms talks with the United States yesterday, breaking off bargaining on long- range weapons 15 days after walking out of parallel negotiations on medium- range missiles., The Soviet Union discontinued the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks on in tercontinental nuclear missiles claiming the "global strategic situation" changed with the arrival of new U.S. missiles in Western Europe. President Reagan said in Washington he does not interpret the Soviets departure from strategic arms talks in Geneva as a "walkout" and indicated he might be willing to meet Soviet President Yuri Andropov for a summit t' improve relations between the superpowers. Reagan, speaking to reporters as he left the White House for a speech in Indianapolis, noted that the end of the Geneva talks on reducing long-range nuclear weapons was a "regualr adjournment that was scheduled to take place." Eastern Airline pact approved MIAMI - Union leaders yesterday approved a $360 million employee bailout plan for Eastern Airlines that management and labor hope will avert default and restore the carrier to financial health. Leaders of the pilots, machinists and flight attendants unions all agreed to: an investment program which after one year would give workers control of 25 percent of the carrier's stock and four seats on the board of directors. In.. exchange, they would invest 18 percent to 22 percent of their pay in the firm. Eastern's 37,500 employees - members of the three unions plus some, 15,500 nonunion workers - must vote on the plan by Dec. 31. Eastern's bankers must also approve, but a consultant to the Machinists' union said. that is expected to be a formality. "The employees are not truly involved in the management of the com- pany," said Charles Bryan, chief of the 12,000-member Machinists' District 100. German official cargecd in payoff BONN, West Germany - Bonn prosecutors yesterday charged Economics Minister Otto Lambsdorff with accepting the equivalent of $50,000 in bribes - the first time a West German government minister has been under criminal charges. Chief prosecutor Franzbruno Eulencamp filed the charges with the Bonn district court after nearly two years of investigation into influence peddling and financing of West German political parties. / The prosecutor charged that Lambsdorff, 57, took the payoffs in 1977 and 1980 from the Duesseldorf-based Flick holding company to influence a tax decision in favor of the firm. Lamsdorff has denied any wrongdoing and insisted he never accepted payoffs during his six-year-old tenure as Economics Minister. If convicted, he could be sentenced to as much as five years in prisdn. It will be at least two months before the case comes to trial, court spokesman Hans Brenner said. A panel of three judges must first review the charges and decide whether to issue a formal indictment or drop the case, he said. Poor airport equipment caused Madrid collision, officials say MADRID, Spain - Union and airline officials cited lack of ground radar and multicolor warning lights yesterday as major factors in the fiery collision of two jetliners at Madrid airport that left more than 90 dead. All 42 people aboard an Aviaco DC-9 were killed and 50 more aboard an Iberia Air Lines Boeing 727 perished in the collision at the fog-bound airport Wednesday. A 93rd person, a stewardess, was missing and presumed dead. Yesterday, government officials joined about 500 people at a funeral Mass for the victims at Barajas Airport. The field later reopened to traffic, but passengers on outbound Iberia flights did not receive their usual Spanish newspapers. Iberia said it wanted to avoid upsetting travelers with stories and photos of the collision. Meanwhile, the president of the Spanish Air Traffic Controllers' Association, Mariano Hernandez, said the runway signal lights at the airport were not sufficient for conditions of heavy fog. "We're not just starting to criticize these conditions now. We've been complaining about them for a long time," he told reporters. Jose Antonio Silva, a pilot and member of the Aviaco board, said the collision might not have occurred if the runways had a signal system of multicolor lights, like many large airports. Citizens angry at housing order CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. - Angered townspeople said yesterday it will be difficult for them to meet a federal judge's Dec. 15 deadline to integrate public housing by forcing blacks and whites to swap apartments. The order issued last week by U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice emerged from a 1980 lawsuit alleging housing discrimination in the East Texas town of 4,500 people located 140 miles northeast of Dallas. Major L.D. Williamson said as of yesterday only one white woman, Doris Holder, 44, had moved into the black housing project called Cheatham Heights and one black family, headed by Lillie Mae Ricks, 44, had moved to the white project known as College Heights. Mrs. Holder said she gave up a two-bedroom apartment for a one-bedroom apartment. Mrs. Ricks said she gave up a four-bedroom apartment with two bathrooms for a three bedroom, one bath unit. Justice's order seeks a 50-50 racial balance in the projects, each of which have .about 50 apartment units with rents ranging from $2 a month to about $250. (.1mc iichfigan Baflu Friday, December 9, 1983 Vol. XCI V-No. 77 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: 1 Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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