Clinic to run film, lecture BY JESSICA STRICK The University's Psychological Clinic will sponsor a showing of David Lynch's controversial film "Blue Velvet," in what may be the first in a series of film-lecture pro- grams. Rackham graduate student Jennifer Stuart, a psychology intern at the clinic, said the program is designed to show a "current and psychologi- cally provocative film." The lecture following the film should encourage intellectual thought with applied psychological theory, she said. "What David Lynch does as a di- rector, in a complicated way, shows us 'the unconscious fantasies of the protagonist and shows them as if they're reality," said Psychoanalyst Ronald Benson. He will lead the dis- cussion with English Prof. Ira Konigsberg, Director of the Program in Film and Video Studies. The film centers around the familiar "coming of age" theme, said Benson, adding that David Lynch's treatment of the transition from ado- lescence to adulthood "speaks directly to tis" and causes a stronger, often confusing, reaction. "Blue Velvet" is strung together with real events and dream-like fan- tasies without a logical chronology, which forces the viewer to react to both. Benson said the film's blatant sexuality, sado-masochistic violence, and potent symbolism disturb many viewers. "It bypasses the usual with- out a true intellectual understanding of what we've seen. It is a highly emotional experience." The Psychological Clinic will sponsor this event for entertainment and exposure, as well as to raise money to support training and re- search projects at the clinic. Stuart said attendance at the film this Saturday, to be held at 7 p.m. in MLB Auditorium 3, will determine whether the clinic will sponsor future presentations. The University provides the clinic with only one-fourth of its funds. Founded in 1938 by a grant from Mary Rackham, the clinic serves lo- cal residents and University students while training its staff of graduate students, Clinical Psychology stu- dents, and School of Social Work students. GEO Continued from Page I to find other, internal solutions," Holbrook said. Holbrook said the outside tax at- torney, who has not yet been hired, will answer that question and, if needed, suggest such solutions. A decision will be made by mid- November, he said. And it can't take much longer: the University, expecting Congress to re- enact the exemptions, has been pay- ing the 1988 taxes itself and billing the students - without imposing penalties on those who didn't pay. But if the new tax law doesn't offer exemptions, GSAs will have to pay those bills next year. THE UNIVERSITY has con- sulted external tax counsel for advice on the tuition tax waiver issue be- fore. Their previous attorney, David Donaldson of Boston, maintained the tuition waiver will be taxable as long as it remains in the GEO contract. "We are certainly behind the Uni- versity in their attempt to get another opinion; we obviously didn't like Donaldson's conclusions," said GEO President Don Demetriades. GEO has said it will not agree to remove the waiver from the contract when it be- gins new negotiations with the Uni- versity this spring; the students don't want to leave the waiver "up to the University's discretion." "Donaldson was working under the old law. We want someone new for this new situation," Holbrook said, but would not say whether Donaldson's interpretations affected the University's decision not to re- tain him. Two members of Congress, speaking about the tax bill last week, The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 2, 1988 - Page 5 Center gets grant to fight blindness BY NOELLE SHADWICK The Kellogg Eye Center received a $276,000 grant this fall to study causes and cures of Retinitis Pigmentosa - a hereditary disease that causes blindness in one out of every 4,000 people. The grant was given to the Kel- logg Eye Center by the National Re- tinitis Pigmentosa Foundation. RP affects vision by destroying the eye's photoreceptors, said Dr. Paul Sieving, assistant professor of Ophtalmology. Photoreceptors usu- ally catch light and send messages of what has been received to the brain. But people with RP lose all of their photoreceptors. The disease is first detected during the teenage years when victims begin having trouble seeing at night. Later on, peripheral vision disappears, causing objects to appear as it they were located at the end of a tunnel. The patient is usually blind by the age of 50, Sieving said. The Kellogg Center team, two re- searchers and two consultants, will try using linkage'analysis to locate the gene that causes Retinitis Pig- mentosa. In this method researchers try to associate certain chromosome markers or probes which occur on certain areas of the chromosome with the disease. Because RP is passed from one generation to the other through the x chromosome - females have two x chromosomes; males, one - the re- searchers can pinpoint certain areas on the chromosome which could carry the gene. By charting the course of the dis- ease through large families and by studying blood samples of those family members, researchers can de termine if one type of molecular probe or marker occurs on the t chromosome more often than others. "This gets you close to the region where the gene is positioned," Siev- ing said. , WE ROBIN LOZNAK/Doily Members of the Delta Delta Delta society teeter-tot on the Diag yesterday in an effort to raise money for Mott Children's Hospital. Greeks teeter-toter for tots BY MARK MENDELIS Despite bone-chilling rains, Ann Arbor's infamous winds, and mid-term-minded students, two campus greek houses are pooling their resources to put on the sev- enth annual Diag Teeter-Totter-A- Thon. Delta Delta Delta women and Chi Psi men will be teeter-totter- ing on over 10 feet of see-saw for 48 hours, while other house members collect donations for children at Mott Children's Hospital. The Teeter-Totter-A-Thon be- gan yesterday at noon and will run until noon tomorrow. Last year the benefit raised roughly $2,600 for the children at Mott, many of whom suffer from cancer, bone marrow diseases, and other rare childhood disorders. This year, the two greek organizations hope to raise $3,000, said Laura Irwin of Delta Delta Delta. "I'm very flattered that they (the sponsors and the student body) would think of us and the children that we are treating," said Dr. Lawrence Boxer, professor and director of pediatric hematology at Mott. The bulk of the proceeds will be applied to ongoing research projects at the pediatric center, Boxer said. He added that the cen- ter was recently awarded a "big- league bucks" grant from the Na- tional Institutes of Health for its groundbreaking research in pedi- atrics. The grant will provide funding for a cancer center to be built on the Medical Center grounds. Most greeks at the benefit said the cause was wholly worthwhile and even fun at times. Though -the late-night or "graveyard" shifts can be chal- lenging to early morning teeterers, there are clearly some benefits. "Because there is less of a rush,j people give more money at night," noted Lynn Hudes, an art school junior and member of Delta Delta Delta. I Forum Continued from Page 1 versity Affirmative Action Director, said the University should be more accessible to prospective students. Recent tuition increases, she said, are making the University a more exclusive institution - which is a "very serious problem... If the gov- ernment does not provide the dollars for the University of Michigan, we have to get those dollars from some- place," she said. LEWAND, a Birmingham at- torney who did not attend the University, agreed, saying that his. "fresh approach" to the board cai- help garner more University funds from the state. Lewand was the only major-party, candidate to support adding sexual orientation to the University's non- discrimination bylaw. The Libertarian candidates spent their time explaining their political philosophies and relating them to University issues. Salvette said the University should try to cut its fi- nancial ties with the state and be- come a private college. That way, h6" said, the state will have no control over the University. Musket previews new show BY LAURA SAGOLLA Yesterday from the damp and windy Diag, there rose strange strains of hosannas and amens. The group was not liturgical, but theatrical. Not religious, but a little boisterous. It was a preview - or a celebration - of Musket's "Jesus Christ Super- star," which opens Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Power Center. On the steps of the graduate li- brary, the cast of "Superstar" offered an energetic round of three songs from the show, including the title tune. The sound system was poor, but not poor enough to drown out their insistent voices. The production's biggest innova- tion, according to director Eric Gib- son, a junior in the music school, is its unusual casting. Pontius Pilot and Herod, traditionally male roles, will be played by women to offset the show's gender lopsidedness. "It will be tasteful but fun," Gibson said. "It won't be a deep, de- pressing story. That's the last thing we wanted." Stop studyin' and start laughin'! Stand Up Comedy PRESENTS THE HLARIOUS COMEDY OF LOWELL SANDERS With Student Comedans Tom Franck Jon Glaser and Dana Nessel WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 2 10 P.M. LSA NEEDS YOU .. . FOR STUDENT GOVERNMENT APPLICATIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE FOR THE 88-89 TERM - PICK ONE UP IN THE LSA OFFICE 4003 MICHIGAN UNION APPLICATION FILING DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH GE T INVOLVED!! FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE LSA OFFICE 763-4799 f-" 4 y4, F > :ff IN THE U-CLUB $2.50 W~etp. 4cira I R 1*U kmf Y-r 00"1.O.m " Sunday, . da' gO THE ~a$Th~c.,UN1VEiRSITY The University Club is a private club for students, faculty, staff, alumni, and their accompanied guests. Only members may purchase alcohol. [i CAREERS BEGIN' WITH... Representatives of Lafarge Corporation will be FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4 Lafarge Corporation. The Lafarge Corporation is a Fortune 300 Company, with annual sales of over $1 Billion, based in Reston, Virginia. Through its affiliation with French based Lafarge Coppee, we offer an excellent opportunity to travel and advance in an International Organization. The Lafarge Corporation of today operates i on Campus to interview candidates for entry-level Engineers in the fields of: " MECHANICAL " ELECTRIC " V TJTT. - CERAMIC " MINING ClU"Tay n v I I