s Students juggle dlasses - antd more The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 10, 1984 - Page 3 By MARLA GOLD Some students have a hard time juggling four classes at once. Brian Barnier juggles his business ad- ministration classes as well as bowling pins while riding a unicycle. Barnier heads the Ann Arbor chapter of: the Juggling and Unicycle Club, which gets together in the Union Ballroom on Sunday nights to throw things around. OUTSIDE IN the hall, a sign reads "Free Juggling Lessons," and the neophyte who steps into the room is handed three safe, soft bean bags. Last Sunday, one member kept trying to keep eight red balls going at once - he hasn't gotten past six yet, but that comes with practice. People have to "unlearn their childhood training against dropping things," explains Rod, one of the club's regulars. ROD BEGAN juggling "seriously" a few years ago, and said that his initial "lifetime quest was to be able to juggle five balls at once." But five balls didn't turn out to be much of a challenge, he said. Rod takes his juggling seriously. He says the activity needs to be stripped from the "circus" image that surroun- ds it, and instead "should be looked on as an athletic exercise." The motions improve hand-eye coordination and may even strengthen parts of the brain, Rod says. To help rid juggling of some of its negative stereotypes, Barnier is trying to make it a course offering of the University Activities Center in the fall. BARNIER says the level of commit- tment in the 70-member group varies, from some who treat it as a hobby, to those who "really get into it." The biggest committment is from the street performers who make some or all of their living from juggling, and club members will have their chance to show their stuff on the street this July, during the Art Fair. While the club combines juggling and unicycling, juggling is definitely the most popular of the two, Barnier said. "That's because juggling is more ac- cessible," he says. But unicycling really isn't as hard as it looks, he says. Barnier says he knows one five-year- old unicyclist who "is a terror on a unicycle." Of course she has been at it a long time - she started when she was two years old. PPE- Highlight Brendan Galvin, a guest of the University's English Department, will read from the poetry collection "Winter Oysters" today at 4 p.m. in the Rackham West Conference Room. Performances UCAM, LASC, Campus Ministries - Holly Near, fundraising concert, 8 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. School of Music - Violin recital, Georgia Greene, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Voice recital, Raymons Shuster, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Traditional Music and Dance - Bonnie Rideout, Scottish fiddler, 8 p.m., 509 S. Seventh. Residential College - Sherry Kohn, dancer, and Bill Potter, musician, "Between Meetings: A Multi-Media Concert," 8 p.m., Residential College Auditorium, East Quad. Speakers Human Resource Development-Joyce Morgan and Maria Hunsberger, Creating Written Instructions," 1:30-4:30 p.m., Rm 4051, LSA. - Continuing Medical Education - "Hemodynamic Monitoring Seminar," Towsley Ctr. For more information call 763-5900. Ecumenical Center - Julia Gittleman, "Organizing at the Local Level," noonjnternational Center, 603 E. Madison. Engineering - S. S. Lavenberg, "Iterative Methods for the Approximate Analysis of Multichain Queueing Network Models of Computer Performance," 4 p.m., Rm. 4224, E. Engin. *School of Education - D. Kohnstamm, "Twenty Years of Early Childhood Education & Psychology in the Netherlands," 8 p.m., International Center; "Education Reform & Public Policy: Who Decides? Who Pays?" 7 p.m., East Conference Rm., Rackham. Chemistry - Richard Bernstein, "Orientation Dependence of Reaction Cross Sections: Toward the Steric Factor in Chemical Kinetics," 4 p.m., Rm. 1300, Chem. Bldg. Biology - Gordon Moore, "Why is the Eucaryotic Genome So Large: The C-Value Paradox Revisited," noon, 1139 Nat. Sci. International Center - "Custom Tailoring Your Trip to Europe," 3:30 p.m., MLB Lecture Rm. 2. CHGD - "The Influence of Neonatal & Postnatal Factors on the Development of Preterm Infants," noon, Rm. 1000, 33 N. Ingalls. Computing Center - Chitra Ramanujan, "Intro to Pascal V: Simple I/O," 3:30 p.m., BSAD. English - Robert Weisbuch, "Melville's 'Bartleby' and the Dead Letter of Charles Dickens," 8 p.m., West Conference Rm., Rackham. Chinese Studies - Robert Dernberger, "Skinner's Economic Macroregions: An Important Question and Methodological Problem in China's Economic History," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Rudolf Steiner Institute - E. Katz, "Know yourself - Two basic exercises for self-improvement,"8 p.m., 1923 Geddes. Meetings His House Christian Fellowship - Fellowship & Bible Study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann. Ann Arbor Go Club - 7-11 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Lesbian Network - 7:30 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Miscellaneous Fencing Club - practice, 8-10 p.m., Coliseum, Hill and Fifth. CEW - Job Hunt Club, noon-1:30 p.m., 350 S. Thayer. WCBN - 88.3 FM, Updates on University policy & national scope from students in Political Sciences, 6 p.m. Women's Softball - Michigan vs. Eastern Michigan, 3 p.m., Varsity Field. Men's Baseball - Michigan vs. Wayne State, 3 p.m., Ray Fisher Stadium. Extension Service - 19th Annual Fire Apparatus Supervisors Seminar, registration 8 p.m., Fire Service Instruction & Research Center, North Campus. Rackham - Victorian videotapes, "Dickens as a Radical Reformer & the Dark Novels," noon, Rm. 06, Angell. Nutrition Services - Weight control class, noon, Rm. C7018, Outpatient Bldg. Recreational Sports - Registration begins for Sports-O-Rama, 8:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m., N. Campus Recreation Bldg. University Cellar - Computer open house, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Union. Museum of Art - Art Break, Barbara Krauss, 12:10 p.m. Golden Key National Honor Society -Spring Reception honoring new members, 7:30 p.m., Hussey Rm., League. Soudnings - Women in the Wilderness, 7:30-9:30 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, 1413 Washtenaw. Rackham Student Government - Discussion about teaching assistants' tuition waver issue, 7:30 p.m., E. Council Rm., Rackham. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Malicious Intent University law prof to hear Hughes case By SUSAN MAKUCH Wade McCree, a University law professor, will hear testimony today in a case that will decide whether the state of California or Texas will collect inheritence taxes on the estate of the late billionaire Howard Hughes. Today's preliminary hearings are in- tended to help McCree decide whether to hold the actual proceedings in Michigan or somewhere closer to the two western states, such as Denver. HE SAID he would consider trying the case out west if there were wit- nesses or other sources of relevantin- formation which could not travel to Michigan. McCree, a former U.S. Solicitor General, was appointed in 1982 to hear the case as a Special Master of the Supreme Court. Both Texas, where Hughes was born, and California, where he lived for the longest period of time, contend that Hughes' domicile was in their state. A person may have many residences, but only one domicile, or legal home. At stake are millions of dollars in inheritence taxes which will go to the state that convinces McCree its claim is true. McCree teaches courses such as Con- sititutional Law and Trial Practice in the Law School. His students have ob- served some of the pre-trial proceedings and McCree said that "If I do try the case here, I'm sure they will want to come." :Tender mercies Piru, the first California condor hatched this year, is helped out of its shell yesterday morning by San Diego Zoo birdkeeper Cyndi Kuehler. PUSH must return money, Dept. of Education says Challenger crew ready to try satellite repair again (Continued from Page 1) Hansen said most of the questioned expenses involved "bookkeeping mat- ters here and there" and "some questions about keeping proper recor- ds." He said the government was, making no allegations of fraud or misconduct against Jackson or others. THE EDUCATION Department said all or part of the income may have to be turned over to the government. The repayment request marked the second step in the government's tangle with PUSH-Excel over the way federal aid to the group was used. Education Department auditors last August questioned the spending of more than $1.3 million of federal grants totaling approximately $2,7 million. The department reviewed those audits and Hallowed some expenses' earlier targeted as questionable. OFFICIALS asked for the money back in letters to PUSH-Excel dated March 30 and March 31. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (AP) - Short on maneuvering fuel but given a ''high probability of success," Challenger's orbiting repairmen will try again today to tow the slowly tur- ning Solar Max satellite into the shuttle cargo bay to be fixed. The shuttle would be in position to latch on to Solar Max beginning at 8:11 a.m. EST and "it may be another half orbit before we actually achieve cap- ture," said Flight Director John Cox. Challenger circles the Earth every 93 minutes at its height of nearly 30 miles. THROUGH a miracle of brains and computer technology, the satellite - which was twisting and tumbling after rescue attempts failed Sunday - was making one turn every 12 minutes in one direction, with a slight wobble. At that rate, said Cox, astronaut Terry Hart will have four to five minutes on each turn to guide the shut- tle arm to a pin on the side of the satellite and lock it on. "I suspect we'll get it on the first rotation," he said. "I can't give you Las Vegas odds. We've got a high ' $3.00 Cuff a regular $18.00 haircut! * Haircut includes: shampoo,' W W .~ conditioner, and hand drying {- -- - --- -------4 E $10.00 Off m 00nrnlrCCA ovl C probability of success, a high probability of picking it up." Challenger's fuel for the rescue was low, so flight controllers worked out a plan to get the most out of what was left. They moved up one engine firing yesterday, instead of a series of firings today, and told commander Robert Crippen: "The strategy behind the burn is hopefully this will give us a free ride." When it left the launch pad on Friday, Challenger carried 1,488 pounds of nitrogen tetroxide and 930 pounds of hydrazine to power its small forward steering jets. An 880,000-mile chase to rendezvous with Solar Max and Sun- day's failed attempt by George Nelson to lock on to the crippled sun-watching satellite left the shuttle with only 22 percent of the fuel. NASA rules set 3 percent as the minimum. Paradoxically, Nelson's effort to steady the Solar Max on Sunday set it turning like a ball in flight and raised fears it would be impossible to control. Voted among the best by the Michigan Daily. Satisfaction Assured. CHAR SM ) HAIR & SKIN CARE FOR HIM & HER HOURS Monday-Friday 9"7. Saturday 9-5 333 S. Fourth Ave. 995-0804 BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY Introduction 161 (Div. 318) OFFERED SPRING. HALF 1984 4 cr. MTWTh 1 - 3 MLB Lec. Rm. 2 N.S. Distribution' For more information call ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT 764-7274 I I z areawra5O om v ,I a Iu ar. palm x (longer hair, slightly more) -- - - - - - - 15% Off 1 hair coloring services. :. e a cellophanes. highlighting. xto 1 o color blending, weaving, etc. C _, PLUS: 15% off on haircare products.-.1 7 _ / t I V PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS MANAGERS! The U.S. NAVY Supply Corps has openings in training programs offering early managerial and technical responsibilities. Qualified applicants will receive 10 month's paid training program leading to immediate managerial positions in one of the following areas; * SYSTEMS INVENTORY MANAGEMENT " ACQUISITION CONTRACTING " COMPUTER SYSTEMS " FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Prole of a wolverine before 9 a.m.... We can't guarantee a stop to early classes, but life is easier at University Towers. Only 5 minutes from the diag, your classes, favorite restaurants, shopping and recreation, a true blue wolverine can afford a little extra sleep. Take advantage of the best location on campus! Our rent is very reasonable: i --1 I