Page 2-Saturday, November 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily Program aims at ending hunger Church Worship Services Fr P-1 P-1 Fr fi q Ff i 5 1fP7Fr i P FP7 I Mtr l W lr NN rltr WWWmnnnnnnnnnra ca1ra rrm rmrrar M-RI r, UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL Serving the Campus for LCMS Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor 111 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 and 068-8720 . Double Sunday Services-9:15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 a. m. -'Midweek Worship Wednesday at 100 p.m. :Midweek Bible Study Thursday at 7:30 p.m. * * * CAMPUS CHAPEL (One Block North of S. University and Forest) 1236 Waslitenaw Ct. Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 10 a.m.-Service of Holy Communion. 6 p.m.-Evening Worship. U, * * * AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS ;,CENTER at FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron St.--663-9376 zX.,Theodore Kachel, Campus Minister Worship-10 a.m.-"Trying Times," b Rev. Ted Kachel. ;unday-5:30 p.m.-Student Fellow- sp-, Discussion: "Evensong at Peter- brough" by Philip Toyn ee, meet in Cmpus Center lounge and bring brown isupper. Beverage and dessert pi gvided., unday-8 p.m.-Opening reading of W 11. Auden's Christmas Oraporio play, " or The Time 'Being." Meet in Cam- p Center lounge. The hours jare long, but that's Sthe pay isP ulw lousy. But as a volunteer you'll get to help America stand a little taller. And you'll stand a little taller yourself. America needs your help or we wouldn't beasking. Your community 'needs your help. People 18 or 80: we don't care as long as you do. VISTA is co ming alive again. Come alive with us. VISTA. Call toll free: 800-424-8580. VISTA A Pubhc Service of This Newspaper & The Advertisigng Councit CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium (Across from Pioneer High) Schedule of Services: Sunday-Bible School-9:30 a.m. Worship-10:30a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Wednesday-Bible Study-7:30 p.m. Koinonia (AtBible Study for college students) For information call 662-2756 Wilburn C. Hill and Larry Phillips, Evangelists Transportation: 662-9928 STUDENTS* Join us for Sunday School and Worship PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Packard & Stone School Road Sunday School-9: 4a.m. Worship-1i1:00 a.m. For transportation-call 662-6253 LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (The Campus Ministry of the ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship at 11:00 a.m. Supper at 6 p.m. Followed by a program and discus- sion at 7:00 on "Liberation Theology," Rev. Anne Broyles who has traveled' and studied in Latin America will lead us in a discussion on liberation theology. Sunday Bible Study: Love and Jus- tice-9:30 a.m. Monday Night Bible Study on North Campus-8:00 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave.-662-4466 William M. Ferry Carl R. Geider Graham M. Patterson Services of Worship: Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Coffee hour at 12 noon. Student Fellowship meets at 4:00 p.m. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.-Campus Bible Study in the French room. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division Steve Bringardner, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Service of Worship-11:00 a.m. Time of Meeting-6:00 p.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) Worship Schedule: 8:30 a.m.-Holy Communion in the Chapel. 9:30 and .11:00 a.m.-Morning Wor- ship in the Sanctuary. Church School for All Ages-9 :30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Choir Rehearsal Thursday-7:15 p.m. Ministers: Dr. Donald B. Strobe Rev. Fred B. Maitland Dr. Gerald R.Parker Education Director: Rose McLean Intern: Carol Bennington WESLEY FOUNDATION UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY 602 E. Huron at State, 668-6881 Rev. W. Thomas Schomaker, Chaplain Rev. Anne Broyles, Chaplain Shirley Polakowski, Ofice Manager Sunday-5:00-Song practice. 5:30-Worship Service. Followed by shared meal. ANN ARBOR UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 502 W. Huron 10:30 Sunday Morning, Nov. 12- Topic title: "On Gilbert & Sulliyan" by Harry Benford, faculty advisor to the University of Mchigan-Gilbert & Sullivan Society. "Things are seldom as they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream." -H.M.S. Pinafore. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekly Masses: Daily-Mon.-Fri. 5:10 p.m. Saturday-7:00 p.m. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m, noon, and 5p.m. North Campus Mass-9:30 a.m. at Bursley Hall, West Cafeteria. A meetinf for divorced Catholics every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Right of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5 p.m. onFriday only; any other time by appointment. CANTERBURY LOFT Episcopal Campus Ministry 332 SQith State St. RevAndrew Foster, Chaplain SUNDAY COMMUNITY EVENTS: 11:00 a.m.-Bruch and Social Hour. 12:00 noon-Celebration of the Holy Eucharist. Canterbury Loft serves Episcopal- ians at the Uni~versity of Michigan and sponsors -programs in the arts which have ethical or spiritual themes. * * * EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 2535 Russell Street Sunday School-10 a.m. Morning Worship-11a.m. Thursday Bible Study and Prayer- 7:00 p.m. Sunday Evening Service, 727 Miller, Community Room-6:00 p.m. For spiritual help or a ride to our services please feel free to call Pastor Leonard Sheldon, 761-0580. Affiliated with G.A.RB.C. By STEVEN SHAER In 1977, there was enough grain produced in the world to fill every per- son's daily nutritional needs, yet an- nually over 450 million people die from malnutrition, according to the Commit- tee Concerned with World Hunger. To inform the public of the malnutrition crisis, the committee is sponsoring a four-day program featuring various speakers and films beginning this Monday. The program will conclude Thursday with par- ticipants fasting and donating the money they did not spend on food to the committee. COMMITTEE member Myra Isaacs said the goal of the program is to show University students that hunger exists throughout the world, and that "even in Detroit, hunger is inevitable for the. people." She said the committee will, contribute the funds to Oxfam- America, a non-profit organization that sends contributions directly to coun- tries with self-development programs. "We are concerned with ending world hunger. Our primary goal abroad is to assist development in rural areas where the hungry live," said Joseph Short, executive director for Oxfam- America. According to Short, Oxfam-America is attempting to create support throughout the United States for aiding underdeveloped countries through self- help organization. "There is a national program involving groups in the United States helping spread the word about the hunger problem," Short said. THE COMMITTEE is one of 1,200 groups involved in this program. The committee was formed at the Univer- sity around five weeks ago out of the "frustration of a professor here who wished to inform students about the hunger problem," Isaacs said. Isaacs asserted that there is a "myth that exists where people believe that countries are underdeveloped due to the lack of resources, ignorance, and over-population. The real reason is that developed countries have stagnated the growth of underdeveloped countries by having the natives grow non-edible crops such as tobacco and sugar. "Our group will show that these people can become self-sufficient," Isaacs said. The committee maintains that with the unequal distribution of resources, the developed countries of the world consume 60 per cent of the world's food resources but comprise only six per, cent of the world's population.rs The committee plans to cover such' topics as hunger in Detroit, U.S. foreign aid and health in Colombia, and nutrition policy and programs. All ac- tivities will be held at the School of Public Health, except a "break-the- fast-potluck" at Campus Chapel. LSA appoints new committee to review state of honors program (Continued from Page 1) in "getting around" University academic requirements. English Professor and Honors counselor Bert Hornback responding to the survey question said, "The Honors Council tries to help students achieve educational goals. Sometimes this means extraordinary fulfillment of requirements. "In my ten years as an honors counselor, I have never seen a student graduate without meeting all requirements. I have often seen students fulfill more than the requirements." The committee has several options open to it other than recommending elimination of the program. "The cancellation option is very benign," Jacobson said. "We could even recommend a 50 per cent increase' in the honors council budget, but I believe we are not likely to be at either' extreme." The committee's final recommendation is expected in' January. LSA-SG hopefuls set for race (Continued from Page 1) However, other presidential-vice- presidential slates may be added to the ballot. Current LSA-SG President, Dick Brazee promised to bring the matter before the council at its next meeting this Wednesday night, "It is our sense on council that we would like some opposition on the ballot. We'd like to promote com- petition," Brazee said. Stechuk, who said he would run "an aggressive, all-out campaign no matter what," is in favor of allowing other candidates on the ballot. "I think they should let the others on the ballot," Stechuk said. "We are trying to use the election to draw atten- tion to LSA-SG." All candidates for executive council seats have a $50 spending limit on cam- paign publicity to be used up until the election on November 20 and 21. Presidential and vice-presidential slates and student organizations may spend up to $80. LSA students will also vote on three referendum questions that appear on the ballot. One of the referendums changes the length of the term an LSA-SG member serves, from the present staggered half-year and full-year terms to full- year terms for president, vice- president and all fifteen council mem- bers. If passed, the rule would apply to those candidates running in the current election. The other two referendum questions~ ask student opinion on whether "ex-- periential learning (Projects Com- munity and Outreach and various in- ternships) should continue to be gran- ted credit in LSA" and whether studen- ts wolild support an increase in their college government assessment from fifty cents to Qne dollar. The LS&A Curriculum Committee, a; faculty and student review group, is' currently assessing the experiential learning programs. SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY Call 764-0558 No ink between the pill, defects Earn 8 Credits This Spring in NEW HAMPSHIRE THE NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM MASS MEETING TUES. NOV. 14 8pm 229 Angell Hall for more information PROF. WALTER CLARK Dept. of English 764-0418 or 761-9579 NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - Use of birth control pills before conception, or during pregnancy, causes little if any increased risk of heart defects in the of- fspring, a four-year study shows. Previous reports suggested a link between use of oral contraceptives and congenital heart defects in pregnancies that might result despite use of con- traception. But the Yale Medical School study found no support for that speculation in cases of women who stopped taking the pill when they became pregnant. EVEN WHEN a woman continued using the pill, either by preference or unawareness of her pregnancy, the in- crease of defects among children they bore was insignificant, said Dr. Michae-I Bracken, study director. But women who use the pill and also smoke a pack or more of cigarettes per day while pregnant, are 13 times more likely to deliver a child with heart damage, he said. Although the study didn't deal with that phenomenon, scientists suspect that the pill and heavy smoking com- bine to affect the fetal blood supply. AMONG WOMEN who have not used the pill, an average of 10 in 1,000 live births involve heart malformations. The study of information on more than 4,000 infants born in the New Haven and Hartford areas showed that the level of risk was about the same for r - pill users who stopped taking it after becoming pregnant. For those who con- tinued after conception, the rate in- creased to 20 per 1,000 births. But Bracken said the difference is "not statistically significant." ABOUT 300 obstetricians and pedia- tricians took part in the study. Four Yale research scientists evaluated the results of interviews with 1,370 mothers of infants born with heart defects and with 2,968 mothers of healthy. infants. Staff members of Yale-New Haven' Hospital and the Hospital of St. Raphael in New Haven, New Britain General Hospital, Hartford and St. Francis. hospitals in Hartford and Newington Children's Hospital assisted in the study. It was funded by the National In- stitute of Child Health and Human Development. The results were presen- ted recently at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association in Los Angeles. Man eating monkeys terrorize Ethiopians' NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) - Hordes of take measures to protect the terrified man-eating monkeys have killed and population. devoured at least three persons and a There was no indication from Addis great number of animals in southern Ababa Radio why the monkeys went or Ethiopia recently, terrorizing the the man-eating rampage in the moun- population, Addis Ababa Radio repor- tainous Sidamo region, which borders ted today. Kenya. Late in October, the roaming troop of For more than a year, Ethiopian monkeys killed and then ate two boys, 9 troops and local guerrillas 'have been and 10, the radio said. Earlier, a woman fighting pitched battles in the region in the Sidamo region also was attacked and large areas of natural vegetation and devoured, it reported. have been destroyed. THE MONKEYS have also killed Monkeys typically subsist on the large numbers of sheep and goats and vegetation and birds' eggs, which they destroyed areas of cropland as they hunt in bands. It was considered likely swept through, the report, monitored in the monkeys, starving because of the Nairobi, said. lack of plant material, began attacking Local committees have now appealed humans and smaller animals in to the central Ethiopian government to desperation. i' (', w s" GIGANTIC SALE; SALE I SALE ! SALE SAELE A L A +i .;b t.i SALE Rental f } Returns C , SOFAS (used). END TABLES (used) .... from $69.00 .... from $10.00 LOVESEATS (used) from $49.00 COCKTAIL TABLES (used) .... from $15.00 BEDDING (used). from $25.00 (per piece, mattress and box springs) CHESTS (used) .... from $69.00 HME REAN RAG SS4.05 r Where can you get q six pack that costs as little as 84 Caday, and will last a whole week? u Q DINETTES (used) .. from DRESSERS/ $69.00 tL* I 1'. U