The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 11, 1985 - Page 3 Students suffer with back-to-school stress; I By SUSANNE SKUBIK You waited in line at CRISP for an hour, then the com- puter broke down. You can't get any of the classes you need for your major, and you haven't slept in days. And to top it all off, you find out that your newest roommates are cockroaches. Ah, those welcome-back blues - September stress. Though most everybody gets them, some students seem to deal with campus chaos better than others. "DON'T EXPECT to be a super-person," said Doreen Murasky, senior counselor at University Counseling Ser- vices. "Plan your time realistically and plug away at things slowly." "Don't leave a lot of things hanging over your head. Complete them one at a time and feel good about it," Murasky said. When you're caught in red tape, and there's no one to blame, Murasky suggests a long walk or a bike ride. Of the many stressful situations facing students, registering for classes is clearly one of the worst. But ac- cording to Rhodes Murphy, an LSA academic advisor, much of the stress of dropping and adding can be avoided. "MOST THINGS can wait. There aren't any penalities at Drop/Add until the third week," Murphy said. "Relax and shop around. Register for four classes, but attend five or six. Then if you need an override, you can choosf wisely." Besides CRISP, roommate problems are also likely to surface during the first few weeks of class Murashy suggests that roommates open the lines of communication to talk about their differences. "Sit down with your roommate and make all your ex- pectations clear," she said. "Say, 'it really bugs me when you play your stereo when I'm studying' and 'I really get mad when you don't do the dishes."' Adding to students' stress are poor eating and sleeping habits, Murasky said. Neglect your body, and "sooner or later you'll feel fatigued and irritable." Drinking can also bring more pressure, because "when a student goes to a party, he or she is worrying about fit- ting in and measuring up," she said. *AUDITIONS* OPEN CALL!! RESIDENCE HALL REPERATORY THEATRE -----BE PART OF A NEW CONCEPT IN THEATRE---- ---EXITRESS YOUR CONCERN WITH SOCIAL ISSUES--- Associated Press Looney Tunes In honor of the 50th anniversary of Warner Bros.' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons, the Museum of Modern Aft in New York is running a special exhibit titled, "That's NOT ALL, Folks!" Standing by their creations are animators Chuck Jones, left, and Fritz Freleng, right. Reagan has chance F ederal Reserve Boa WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan is being presented with a chance to shape economic policy for the next decade with two appointmen- ts to the Federal Reserve Board. But the president also faces a dilemma - should he go with a sup- ply-sider interested in economic growth or someone more concerned about the battle against inflation. SINCE the term for a Federal Reserve Board governor is 14 years, Reagan's choices will be influencing economic policy long after he leaves dffice. In making the decision, the president will not be faced with a shortage of candidates willing to ac- cept a prestigious appointment to the central bank's seven-member board. Reagan will actually have two ap- pointments to make to the Fed in coming months. One vacancy exists already with the resignation last mon- th of Lyle Gramley to accept a job as chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association. THE OTHER ONE will occur in January when the term of J. Charles Partee expires. With those two appointments, Reagan will have nominated a majority of the board. His two earlier choices came from the supply-side o shape rd policy camp. Vice Chairman Preston Martin and Martha Seeger, both of whom have often dissented from the anti-in- flation policies pushed by Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker. Supply-siders believe in sharp cuts in tax rates and an easy monetary policy to stimulate the economy. MONETARISTS, on the other hand, advocate steady money growth as a way of guarding against inflation. The Reagan administration has of- ten been pulled in opposite directions by these two economic philosophies. In his first term, the president pushed for the deep tax cuts that sup- ply-siders favored. AUDITIONS WILL BE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 10 and 12, 7-9 p.m. IN THE WEST LOUNGE--SOUTH QUADRANGLE The Residence Hall Reperatory Theatre will be available to the campus as a resource for educating students in a creative and innovative fashion. The company will be developing a series of dynamic presentations or "eprncs dealing with issuessuch as sex roles, racism,idrug abuse, and stress. Poetry, original material, music, scripted work, and dance will all be combined to create programs to be performed in the Residence Halls and elsewhere on campus. If you have additional questions please call Scott Weissman, Artistic Director, 764-1126 or 764-1137. Scott Weissman, M.F.A., is a graduate of The University of Michigan's Professional Theatre Training Program. He has performed, taught, and directed in the Ann Arbor area over the past three years. --------------HAVE AN I M PA C T!" mm-------------- MSA asks Josephson to nominate VP (Continued from Page 1) Josephson said. HE SAID the assembly plans to con- tinue a review of the constitution and hire a historian to compile MSA's history "so we can have a precedent to fall back on, which we don't now." MSA representatives expressed disappointment at Feusse's depar-. ture, but seemed convinced that she made the right decision. "I'm sorry she resigned, but if she ,HAPPENINGS Highlight The Galliard Brass Ensemble will perform Pachelbel's Canon in D live on the diag at noon as part of a campus "dedication to the service of humanity" sponsored by several University spiritual centers. Films MTF - Call Northside 777, 7 p.m.; Anatomy of a Murder, 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Speakers Russian and Eastern European Studies - Brown Bag Lecture, William Rosenberg and Joseph Placek, "Resources at the University of Michigan," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Meetings Marketing Club -4p.m., Hale Auditorium. Commission for Women - noon, 2002 LSA. Dissertation Support Group -1:30 p.m., 3100 Michigan Union. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., Michigan League. Miscellaneous Career Planning and Placement - Business Intern Program meeting, 6 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. Chemistry - Seminar, Walter Opdycke, "The Development of Catheter-Type Potentiometric Sensors for Ammonia & Carbon Dioxide 'Detection," 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Building. Industrial and Operations Enginerring - Seminar, Stephen Pollack, "Approximate Ion Analysis for Open Tandem Queues with Blocking: Ex- ponential & General Service Distributions," 4 p.m., 241 IOE. Biological Sciences - Seminar, "Photosynthetic Oxygen Evolution," 4 p.m., MLB 2. Department of Statistics - Seminar, "A Limit Theorem for Random Walks in Random Environment," Professor Steven Lalley, 4:00 p.m., 451 Mason Hall. thought she didn't have enough time then I have no problem with it," Krawczyk said, "if the vice president can't put in enough time it would greatly hurt the assembly. FEUSSE SAID she resigned because she didn't have enough time to be both vice president and a resident fellow in East Quad. Mary Ann Nemer, an MSA representative from LSA, wanted to know "who stipulated that Micky had to put in 40 hours every week?" "Forty hours is a lot of time for a student who isn't even amn RF. There's no doubt she should have been an ef- fective vice president without 40 hours a week," Nemer said. Engineering college representative Mike Sovel agreed that "40 hours is too much of anything when you have to go to school. There should be plenty of people to spread the work around so Micky doesn't have to work that much." CORE COMMITTEE member Kris Van De Kerkhove, however thought Feusse "didn't plan well for the position." "She wasn't too familiar with the assembly before she ran,". Van DeKerkhove said. "The bare minimum just isn't enough for a vice president. "Just because Micky resigned doesn't mean we should be rendered impotent all year," Josephson said. He added that Thursday's scheduled meeting of student gover- nment representatives to discuss a budget research committee had been delayed because of Feusse's depar- ture. But the assembly does not expect delays in any other projects as the search for Feusse's replacement con- tinues, Josephson said. In other action last night, MSA unanimously reappointed Ingrid Kock to the position of military researcher. The Financial Expert! These days, every expenditure should be considered an investment. And you don't have to be a big investor to own one of the world's finest financiIal calculators - the HP-12C. Try one today it the university cellar. The HP-12C. An investment for today, and tomorrow. ]#HEWLETT PACKARD *Plus the University Cellar's one year warranty! Main Campus- 341 E. Liberty, at Division 769-7940 North Campus: In the Commons Bldg. 994-9012