100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 24, 1979 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1979-02-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page 2-Saturday, February 24, 1979-The Michigan Daily

More lenient pot bill introduced
in state Senate; passage likely

Church Worship Services

Fig

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 11a.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
UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
409 S. Division
Steve Bringardner, Pastor
Church School-9:45a.m.
Service of Worship-11:00 a.m.
Time of Meeting-6:00 p.m.
* * *
STUDENTS
Join us for Sunday School and Worship
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
Packard & Stone School Road
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Worship-11:00 a.m.
For transportation-call 662-6253
* *-*
WESLEY FOUNDATION
UNITED METHODIST
CAMPUS MINISTRY
602 E. Huron at State, 668-881
Rev. W. Thomas Schomaker; Chaplain
Lynette Bracy, Mike Pennanen,
Shirley Polakowski
Sunday-5:00-Gathering for Sing-
ing. Meal at 5:30.
Sunday-6:15-Worship-Fellowship.
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.
y Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.-Campus Bible
Study in the French room.

CANTERBURY LOFT
Episcopal Campus Ministry
332 Sqfth State St.
Rev":Andrew Foster, Chaplain
§UNDAY COMMUNITY EVENTS:
11:00a.m.-Bruch and Social Hour.
12:00 noon-Celebration of the Holy
Eucharist.
Canterbury Loft serves Episcopal-
ians at the UniVersity of Michigan and
sponsors-programs in the arts which
have ethical or spiritual themes.
* * *
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.
Divorced Catholic Meeting Friday at
7:30 p.m. .
Right of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5
p.m. on Friday only; any other time
by appointment.
* * *
CHURCH OF CHRIST
530 W. Stadium
(Across from Pioneer High)
Schedule of Services:
Sunday-Bible School-9:30 a.m.
Worship-10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday-Bible Study-7:30 p.m.
Koinonia
(A Bible Study for college students)
For information call 662-2756
Wilburn C. Hill and Larry Phillips,
Evangelists
Transportation: 662-9928
* * *
FULL GOSPEL HOLY GHOST
BELIEVING MINISTRY
at THE SALVATION ARMY CHAPEL
9 S. Park Street
Ypsilanti, Michigan
482-4700
Sunday Worship-1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday Worship-7:00 to 9:00

EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH
2535 Russell Street
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Morning Worship-11 a.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.R.B.C.
* * *
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
Serving the Campus for LIS
Robert Kavasch, Interim Pastor
1511 Washtenaw Ave.
663-5560 and 668-8720
Double Sunday Services-9 15 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m.
Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 a.m.
Midweek Worship-Wednesday at
10:00 p.m.
Midweek Bible Study-Thursday at
7:30 p.m.
S* * *
AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS
CENTER at FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
512 E. Huron St.-663-9376
Jitsuo Morikawa, Minister
A. Theodore Kachel, Campus Minister
Worship-10 a.m.-"Fear of Failure"
-Mr. Morikawa.
11 a.m.-College Bible Study-
"Women In The Bible" presentation by
Marilyn Hintermaier, Nurse, and a
member of The Word of God.
LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(The Campus Ministry of the ALC-LCA)
Gordon Ward, Pastor
801 S. Forest at Hill St.
11:00 a.m.-Worship Service. A
luncheon will follow the Worship Serv-
ice. All are welcome to join us.
Monday, Feb. 26:
7:30 p.m.-Lifestyle Assessment
Group-at the Wesley Foundation
(corner of State & Huron). To examine
our lifestyles in light of the world
hunger/ecology/justice situation.
Tuesday, Feb. 27:
7:30 p.m.-Lifestyle Assessment
Group-at Lord of Light.
Wednesday, Feb.28:
7:00 p.m.-Choir practice; new choir
members are always welcome!
8:30 p.m.-Bible Study; a study of the
history and theology of the Old
Testament; led by Gary Herion, a
doctoral student in Old Testament
studies.
* * *
ANN ARBOR UNITARIAN
FELLOWSHIP
502 W. Huron
Phone: 429-2139
10:30 Sunday Morning, Feb. 25-
Topic title: "Orozco-Man of Fire"-
Slide Presentation.
Quote of the Week:
"Poetry implies the whole truth,
Philosophy expressed a particle of it."
Thoreau.

- (Continued from Page 1 )
e Manufacture or delivery of more
than 100 grams, with remuneration, the
penalty will stand at $2,000 and four
years in jail;
* Possession of more than 100 grams
would shift from $1,000 and one year in
jail to $1,000 and 90 days in jail.
* Possession of less than 100 grams
would go from $1,000 and one year in
jail to $25 and no jail. (This penalty is
the same as the one for any civil
penalty, such as a traffic ticket);
" Delivery from an adult to a minor
of more than 100 grams, with
remuneration, from $2,000 and four
years in jail to $4,000 and eight years in
jail;
* Delivery from an adult to a minor
of less than 100 grams, with
remuneration from $2,000 and four
years in jail to $2,000 and two years in
jail, and;
* Delivery from an adult to a minor

of less than 100 grams, no remuneration
from $1,000 and one year in jail to $500
and 180 days in jail.
THIS.YEAR'S bill also states that the
age differential between an adult and a
minor must be three years. Johnston
said: "It would not be fair for a person
18 years and two days old giving to a kid
17 years and 11 months" to be punished
by this law,.
Johnston added that the penalties ap-
ply only to use or possession of
marijuana in public places. "Our con-
cern is for persons with a small amount
using it for their own pleasure. The law
has no right to break into a person's
home to catch someone using it."
The bill will also allow past
marijuana offenders, within a five-year
period, to have those offenses stricken
from their records, so as not to hamper
their employment chances or ad-
mission into schools.

In addition to the bill the House
defeated last December by one vote,
Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor)
sponsored a bill in 1977 that the House
rejected, after initially passing it.
Bullard said after the House ap-
proved the 1977 bill, by the minimum
number of votes, speaker pro-tem Matt
McNeely delivered an emotional
speech about his son's experience with
drugs. The issue was reconsidered and
failed to gain enough votes.
"The legislators have to realize
they'll have to deal with this issue,
because it won't go away," Johnston
said.
The Senate Judiciary Committee will
be holding public hearings on the bill
before sending it out to the Senate floor'
for a vote. The hearings are tentatively
set for March 14. It will then be sent to
the House Judiciary Committee before
a final showdown in the House.

U.S. urges
(Continued from Page 1I
plore this and other possible efforts
which might lead to an end to the con-
flict," he said.
The United States urged the parties
directly involved to act with restraint
and all others to ensure that passions
were not inflamed and the conflict fur-
ther broadened.
Meanwhile, China took its "self-
defense" was deeper into Vietnam
yesterday, throwing fresh infantry
divisions against beleaguered Viet-
namese forces after launching air
strikes on stores of Soviet supplies near
Haiphong, sources in Bangkok,
Thailand and in Tokyo reported.

Indochina cease-fire

THE REPORTED bombing, outside
Haiphong, 75 miles south of the Chinese
border and Vietnam's main seaport,
was the deepest, Chinese penetration
yet and moved them closer to a con-
frontation with the Soviets.
In Moscow, Soviet Defense Minister
Dmitri. Ustinov denounced Peking's
"dangerous provocations ... against
neighboring sovereign states" and said
the Chinese were trying to "plunge the
world into a war."
Thai intelligence sources said the
Soviets were airlifting critically needed
heavy weapons to Vietnam, and Soviet
ships were unloading missiles and

TA relieved of class
after grading dispute.
(Continued from Page 1)

p.m.

* * *

CAMPUS CHAPEL
(One Block North of S. University and
Forest)
1236 Washtenaw Ct. '
Rev. Don Postema, Pastor
10 a.m.-Service of Holy Communion.
6 p.m.-Evening Worship.

Iii

t-
r
.I
t
t

,. /

evaluating them that way in the first
place," she said.
"I BELIEVE it is as unrealistic to
break the class into equal thirds as it is
to expect that everyone will get 'As'.
These are upperclassmen and graduate
students and have pretty well-estab-
lished capabilities," Kinney continued.
Willis defended his system by ex-
plaining that "it lets the student know
how his writing on a particular assign-
ment compares with that of other,
students in the class. Students get a
fairly meticulous reading of their
papers, and we just pick them out and
say, 'This paper belongs in the lower
third of the class in terms of quality on
this assignment'."
"She's actually quite a good reviewer
of writing," Willis said. "I wasn't
dissatisfied with her on that ground.

Her problem was that she apparently
liked to give everybody high marks."
Willis said his method of evaluating
students requires him to be more dis-
criminating.
"IF YOU look at a set of papers, and
you approach it from (my) point of
view, a third of them are in the lower,
third - you just can't escape it," he
said.
Kinney maintains she did not give too
many students high marks. "If I were
such a soft touch, I think I would have
conformed rather than make a ruckus.
Soft touches don't get fired, they con-
form very quickly and I did not, and
that's why I was released," she said.
Despite her object to the reassign-
ment, Kinney said she was hesitant to
publicize the issue. "I am not interested
in a personal vendetta. I don't think
that it does much good to dwell on per-
sonal conflicts. What is important is
how the students feel," she said.

radar equipment in Haiphong harbor
when a half-dozen Chinese Mig-19s
struck Thursday night.
THE JETS DID not attack the ships;
the sources said. Instead they bombed
warehouses believed holding Soviet
war supplies four miles outside the city,
they said.
In Washington, a spokesman said the
State Department had no evidence of
such an air attack and believes Chinese
air strikes have been confined to the
border region.
In Cambodia, China-allied guerrillas
claimed yesterday that they, too, had
scored victories against- the Viet-
namese.
VARIOUS SOURCES reported the
Chinese may have captured a third
Vietnamese provincial capital, ap-
parently had overrun Vietnamese
positions north of Lang Son and were
besieging that strategic town and were
on the verge of cutting off a vital high-
way link.
The Japanese Embassy in Hanoi
reported to the Foreign Ministry in
Tokyo that Chinese troops may have
seized Ha Giang, capital of Ha Tygen
Province in the central part of the 450-
mile-long Chinese-Vietnamese border.
Japan's Kyodo news service said.
The Chinese were reported earlier
this week to have captured two othe
provincial capitals-Cao Bang, east 4f
Ha Giang, and Lao Cai in the west.
Board airs
own gripes
(Coptinued from Page 1)
IN ONE OF the more controversial
tenure cases, Political Science
Assistant Prof. Joel Samoff, who ha-
twice been denied tenure by the faculty
in his department, has informed SARC
members that he would like them toj
review his case.
Samoff, a Marxist political
economist, claims his case was unfairly
judged.
"We did receive a communication
from him and background material. He
(Samoff) has asked us to do that
(review his case) .. . Since his appeal
is still pending in LSA, I think that mat-
ter (whether to consider his case) will b
coming before us on our next meeting,"
said SARC member Gray.
It is unclear whether SARC could
consider Samoff's case prior to the
decision of the LSA appeal board. Gray
claims grievants may skip the interim
step in the process if "it appiars that
things in LSA are too bogged down,"
adding- that Samoff's could be such a
case.
However, Prof. Cooper said cases
which have not been through the
school's appellate process may only be
considered by SARC if "the (school's)
procedure has broken down.

New in town? e
For the latest in news, enter-
tainment, sports . . . you should
subscribe to
jbe 3Ikht!oaUft i
Call 764-0558
to order your subscription today

Daily Official Bulletin'

I I
:e 1
P 0coDro and relax for the Summer UBLET
SA hAUG.Sublet in a modern house
P MA Y thru AUG s
2 single rooms available UPPLEM ENT
SGOD in our 6 Bedroom house.
--5 mFn. from campus & Arb
I 1 Block from Central Rec.
i dfl . -CE Bldg. alRc
C FULLY FURNISHED
itWasher/Dryer &
Dishwasher
----BACKYARD
has a vegetable garden plot
" SUNNY FRONT PORCH
Price Negotiable I
* Call Cheryl or Bruce
I I
o I
NAME
ADDRESS -_
PHONE Ple (Actual size of ad) 1
' PHONE I
Please print or type legibly in the I
space provided, as you would like I
Cost: ONLY $8.00 before th t a
5:00 P.M. March 2, 1979
b

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1979
Daily Calendar:
Guild House: ACLU Forum, The Rights of Minors,
discussion with Diana Austin, Keith Hefner and
Chris Roach, 802 Monroe;8 p.m.
SUMMER PLACEMENT
:3200 SA B 763-11 i7
U.S. D~ept. Commerce, Alaska. Openings for
students who have completed their junior year in
meterology and some synooic lab work - relative
courses oceanography, physics and math. Further
details available.
Defense Mapping Agency, Wash. D.C. Openings
for students majoring in ocean engineering,
hydrography, and oceanography. Must be a
graduate. Further details available.
State of Ohio Environ. Protect. Agency, Columbus.
Openings for students with basic qualifications in
engr/environ. science, knowledge of steam
hydrology, basic fortran programming, calculus.
Full, part-time and internship positions available.
Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse Univer-
sity, N.Y. Summer research assistantships for
juniors who are science or engineering majors in-
terested in sensory and brain research. Further
details available.
Rochester Museum & Science, Center, N.Y.
Museum Internship Program with disciplines such
as history, natural science, anthropology, or
technology. Further details available.
Midland Macromolecular Institute, Mi. Summer
Fellowship position for research in physico-chemical

lab. Background must be in math, computer
programming. Further details available.
Jackson-Hillsdale Community Mental Health
Services, Jackson, Mi. Beth Moser Clinic. Opening
for a student in a master's level program or a
mater's degree in social work or psychology. Fur-.
ther details available.
California Tomorrow Environmental Intern
Program. Openings throughout California. Dozens
of fields covered - urban/transportation planning,
policy admin., photo., energy., econ., journalism,
languages, many others Further details available.
INTERVIEWING:
Camp Sequoia, N.Y. Coed. Will interview Mon.,
Feb. 26 from 9 to 5. Openings include arts/crafts,
drama (head instr. 21), riding (Eng.), athletics,
others. Register in person or by phone.
Camp Tamarack, Mi. Coed. Will interview Tues.,
Feb. 27 from 9 to 5. All positions open. Check them
out. Register by phone or in person.
Camp Crystalaire, Mi. Coed. Will interview Weds,
Feb. 28 from 1 to 5. Openings include art specialist,
cook and general counselors. Register by phone or in
person.
Camp Akiba, Pa. Girls. Will interview Mar. 1 from
9 to 5. Several openings in the various programs -
athletics, sports, tennis, waterfront (WSI), riflery,
crafts and dramatics and others. Register in person
or by phone.
Detroit Area Camp Fire Firls, Camp Wathana.
Will interview Thurs., Mar. 1, from 9 to 5. Counselors
to supervise programs, unit leaders, cook assistant,
waterfront, (WSI), riding.

Moscow's subway system is less than
half the size of New Fork City's but
transports itore passengers, about five
million a day.

"WHY.DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25

"AND IN CONTROVERSY THEY SHALL STAND IN MY
JUDGMENT: AND THEY SHALL JUDGE IT ACCORDING
TO MY JUDGMENTS: AND THEY SHALL KEEP MY LAWS
AND JAY STATUTES IN ALL MINE ASSEMBLIES: AND
THEY SHALL HALLOW MY SABBATHS." Ezekiel 44:24.
Are we interested in God's judgments in view of the way we
learn and consider them? We ought to be inasmuch as we are
hastening to the Judgment Seat of The Almighty! No telling
how many may read this article and shortly thereafter depart
this life for that Appointment God has made for us. That is
one appointment we will all keep and be on time! Are we
interested in God's Laws and Statutes; judging from the way
we have learned what they are and what consideration we
have given them? We ought to be interested for they will be
the basis of His judgment of us! Do we say we have accepted
Christ, joined The Church, been baptized and there is noth-
ing for us to worry about, for:
"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?-For I am

Many of us have not conquered the "love of lucre" enough
to invest ten cents on the dollar in the business of God
Almighty! And many have not conquered their love of ease,
pleasure, sports, etc. enough to give God one day in seven as
He commands. But prefer golf to God, fishing to Faith, foot-
basket-baseball and boating and bathing and booze to The
Beatitudes of The Lord Jesus Christ in The Sermon on The
Mount. And then there are those who prefer cash to Christ
and so run their business on The Lord's Day for the sake of
profit: "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world,
and lose his soul?" Maybe the pronouns "THEE, THOU," a
little further on in the 11th chapter of Romans, verses 19-22,
come close to fitting us and getting our measure:
"Be not highminded, but fear, for if God spared not the
natural branches, take heed lest He also spare not thee.
Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: On them
which fell, severity, but towards thee, goodness-IF THOU
CONTINUE IN HIS GOODNESS: OTHERWISE THOU

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan