"JiNJ NOR C Page 2-Saturday, March 31, 1979-The Michigan Daily Church Worship Services Atomic mishap worsens La 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 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 p.m. Acts 2:39,1Cor.12. Note: We will only be at the Salva- tion Army Chapel until April 18, New location unknown as of yet. * * * WESLEY FOUNDATION UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY 602 E. Huron at State, 668-6881 Rev. W. Thomas Schomnaker, Chaplain Lynette Bracy, Mike Pennanen, Shirley Polakowski Sunday-5:00-Gathering for Sing- ing. Meal at 5:30. Sunday-6:15-Worst ip Fellowship. * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL Serving the Campus for LOTS 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 10:00p.m. Midweek Bible Study-Thursday at 7:30 p.m. * * * 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.-"Submission to Suffering -Mr. Morikawa. 11 a.m.-College Bible Study-"Wo- men in theBible." 5:30 p.m.BDinner-Lenten Service -Panel Discussion on "Christian as Sabbath Symbol" by guest speaker The Rev. Norman DePug, Pastor First Bap- tist Church, Dearborn. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (The Campus Ministry of the ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. 11:00a.m.-Worship Service. 6 p.m.-Dinner. 7 p.m.-Program on the World Peace Tax Fund. Monday, April 2: 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, April 3: 7:30 p.m.-Lifestyle Assessment Group-at Lord of Light. Wednesday, April 4: 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. * * * CANTERBURY LOFT Episcopal Campus Ministry 332 Sqth State St. Rev Andrew Foster, Chaplain %JNDAY 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 University of Michigan and spionsors.-programs in the arts which have ethical or spiritual themes. 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. * * * ANN ARBOR UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 502 W. Huron 10:30 Sunday Morning, April 1- Topic title: "Has Religion Beenra Sig- nificant Factor in My Life?"-Turner Clinics Creative Writing (Proup (Ruth Campbell, founder and social worker, in charge).' Quote of the Week: "Religion without joy-it is no re- ligion"-Theodore Parker. * * * 'METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY "CHURCH 1769 Broadway Rev. Ted Richmond 3 p.m.-Worship with presentation by Representative Perry Bullard. 'n'or Gays. 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 5 p.m. North Campus Mass-9:30 a.m. at Bursley Hall, West Cafeteria. Divorce& 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 . * * * 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. CAMPUS CHAPEL (One Block North of S. University and Forest) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Rev. Don Postema, Pastor April Fool's Day 10:00 a.m.-"Christianity as Comic" (service of Holy Communion). 5:30 p.m.-Film: "The Mark of the Clown" (Floyd Shaffer's film on clown- ing as worship). 6:00 p.m.-Evening service including Shaffer's film "A Clown Is Born." * * * 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. * * * STUDENTS Join us for Sunday School and Worship PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Packard & Stone School Road Sunday School-9:45 a.m. Worship-1i :00 a.m. - For transportation-call 662-6253 (Continued from Page 1) tee, said the accident could lead to long delays in nuclear plant construction. He said the United States could face serious power shortages this summer if the Harrisburg plan- ts and others in the east are closed. "THE INCIDENT puts nuclear power in semi-limbo until all the information is in," the Washington state Democrat told reporters. "It certainly does hurt the nuclear power program." After a briefing by NRC officials, Pennsylvania Sen. Richard Schweiker said: "Nobody knows whether the chance Is one in a thousand or one in a million or one in 10. . . But they (NRC officials) now admit for the first time that a melt- down is possible." Government and plant officials issued conflicting reports on whether the new leak was expected, but they agreed that the amount of radiation was a surprise. "I DID NOT expect the radiation levels to be that high," said E.C. McCabe, an NRC section chief who was at the plant site on the Susquehanna River. Men, women and children began fleeing Harrisburg, but there was no stampede. State police reported traffic was Group sues University in Hash, Bash i controvers By BRIAN and DIAN] (Continued from Page 1) E dward Wil grounds that it violated the First biologist who h Amendment.bilgswhN "To issue someone a permit to ap- voluble advocat pear on the Diag and then to revoke it human behavior is, under these conditions (where a applied his hun religious group is involved), a violation question of ethic of the First Amendment," said Kurt ching the wee] Thornbladh, the lawyer for Sweetfire tures program. Ministries in the case. The sociobio The defendants in the case include: plex developm J.P. Weidenbach, an administrative of- culture; and ev( ficer of the University, Roy More, a - consider to b Vice President of MSA, and Walter nature" are det Stevens, Director of University "biogram," Security. program-the "IT'S SORT OF a grey area as to who maximize one' has final jurisdictional say over the larger human g Diag," said More last night. "That's why I think all three groups (ad- COMPARED ministration, MSA, security), were behavioral ar named in the suit." More explained that view falls som it isn't MSA's normal procedure to pull controversial a request for a permit, but it occurred flyer entitled after he received a memo from security Political?" w to cancel groups scheduled for April 1 perhaps 1,200 on the Diag. streamed into "They (the University) don't want to Hall. It critic sanction anything that has to do with thinly-veileds the Hash Bash, so they don't want to Darwinism. sanction it (the band)," said John Wilson, wh Boshoven, the organizer of Sweetfire etomologist, ch Ministries. Boshoven said he was con- audience at firs cerned about masses of high school students smoking hash on the Didg "light, not even moderate." The scene in the parking lot of the Bainbridge Elementary School, four miles south of the plant, was hectic as parents drove up and hurriedly-pulled their children out. "I'M SCARED FOR the children," said Pat Matier, who was near tears, after she drove up and collected her seven- year-old twins, Kimberly and Kirk. "We are getting out of here," said Michael Paris, 12, who with a classmate lowered the American flag outside the red- brick, one-story schoolhouse. BUT IN OTHER areas of town, many residents expressed little concern over the threat of nuclear contamination. "Everyone seems to be happy and doing their own thing," stated Ed Lysoght, who works at the Maurice Acri restaurant in Harrisburg. "They've been telling jokes, we had a few guys a minute ago arguing about the difference between Tennessee beer and Tennessee ale." A bartender at the English Tavern, said the situation is out of the public's hands. "Whatever's gonna happen's gonna happen. We have no control over what happens to us." With a sigh, he added, "I'm not concerned." tobiologist Says all in the genes BLANCHARD E HAITHMAN son, the Harvard as become the most e of a new concept in r called sociobiology, mbling theory to the. ks last evening, laun- kend's Tanner Lec- ogist said the com- ent of our society, en those qualities we e part of "human termined by a single or genetic innate drive to s own genes in the ene pool. TO other recent guments, Wilson's iewhere between the and the radical. A "Is Sociobiology as handed out to 0 people as they Rackham Lecture ized the theory as sexism and Social o is by trade an oose to address the st as the dean of Ter- mite University to awaken them to his claim that their culture is no more sophisticated than that of the insect world. Using his new identity, he drew an elaborate analogy bet- ween the effects of genetic control on both the termite culture and our own. There's a reason for becoming a temporary termite, according to Wilson. "If you want to understand man, you must stand far away." IN HIS hour-long lecture, the slightly built Wilson said that even our ethical values are generally determined. Therefore, the philosopher must look to biology -to construct ethical principles truly relevant to the way society has evolved. As he states in his new book, On Human Nature, Wilson said, "There is a universal biologically-based human nature." This is not a harmf- ful idea, he continued, but a liberating one since understanding is necessary for useful action. "You care only to the extent that you know," he said. In addition to Wilson's Tanner Lecture last night, the Philosophy Department has scheduled for today three more events in the human values symposium. Samoff criticizes 'U' A1l the j sh aUnlimited Salad ar... a, .or dona lY so 9 L (Continued from Page 1) be able to determine wno else comes in, and not be challenged in that deter- mination," he stated. SAMOFF SAID an institution is based upon its power structure, not on the rules by which it is supposed to operate. "The more successful they (radical faculty) are, the more threatening they are to the forces of the University that have to do with maintaining the present order." Samoff also said many faculty saw the early 1970s as a "good moment for reigning in dissidents" whose "poten- tial allies were quiet." He said this gave those in power the opportunity to repress those voices in the University whose actions ran counter to their own. Therefore, Samoff said, the struggle at the University over rules is ultimately a struggle for power." He also said the University decides which of the various constituencies involved should have the influential voice. SAMOFF ALSO said the University "fears to do something deviant" . because it might lose its position in comparative rankings with other in- stitutions. "But there is no institution that is so tightly put together that there is no room, no corners, no place to maneuver (for dissident thoughts and actions),'' stated Samoff. A GLIMPSE INTO DARKNESS Conference on the Holocaust APRIL 1.2& 3 APRIL 1 Emil Fackenhelm: "The Holocaust: Authentic and Unauthenic Responses" KEYNOTE Address 2 pm Rackham Amphitheatre Multi-Media Program: Dance Performance: I NEVER SAW ANOTHER BUTTERFLY Film: NIGHT AND FOG Photographic and Wire Sculpture Exhibit Panel Discussion: Personal Accounts of Survivors 7:15 pm Pendleton Room APRIL 2 Rev. John T. Pawlikowskl: "Confronting the Holocaust from a Christian Perspective" 7:30 pm Rackham Amphitheatre APRIL 3 Henry Feingold: "The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust" 7:30 pm Rackham Amphitheatre Sponsored by: Michigan Student Assembly; Vice President for Academic Affairs, University of Michigan; B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation; Program in Judaic Studies; LSA-SG; Office of Ethics and Religion; Lord of Light Lutheran Church; Program on Studies in Religion; Jewish Community Council of Washtenaw County. i - s Daily Official Bulletin : SATURDAV, MARCH 31, 1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT 1200 SAB 7634117 Interviews: Cedar Point, Sandusky, Ohio. Your last chance for A a personal interview. Spend your summer outdoors - make good money and new friends from other universities. Will interview Weds., April 4 from 1 to S. Scholarship Fopundation, Concord, N.H. Will in- terview Thurs., Aug. 5 from 9 to 5. Interview various potential sources for private scholarships. Travel and meal expenses paid. Further information available. Camp Blue Ridge/Equinox, Pa. Coed. Will inter- view Fri., Apr. 6 from 9 to 5. "Openings include " specialists in waterfront (WS1) nature, drama, sports, etc. Register in person or by phone. Camp Tamarack, Mi. Coed. Will interview Thurs., Apr. 5 from 9:00 to 3:30. many' general openings available - also specialists such as sports, nature, dramatics, etc. Register in person or by phone. Little Brothers of the Poor, Chicago, Ill. Will inter- view Mon., April 9 from Ito 5. Work with those who a need you most - children, families, elderly; assist with cooking, shopping, maintenance, gardens. Fur- ther details available. Register in person or by phone. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (LISPS 344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 144 Saturday, March 31, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan ; 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); 13 by, mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer ses-. sion published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates:.: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage p aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. RAGE?" I "WHY DO THE HEATHEN Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Ponderosa is having a fabulous fish fry. For $2.49 you ccn enjoy all the filet of sole you can eat, plus a piping hot bakedi potato orfrench fries, and warm roll with butter. Plus unlimited vists to our salad bar. Fhe Fabulous Fish Fry at Ponderosa. Catch it, all day... Last week we wrote of the retribution that follows evil doing. "Be sure your sin will find you out," Numbers 32:23. History reveals the truth of that statement. Only a very few examples are given as follows: "The domestic peace and prosperity of the good old patriarch Jacob was sadly marred. He is compelled to become at an early age, an exile from his father's house - to flee before the aroused wrath of his brother - to suffer a long oppression and wrong in the family of Laban, his kinsman; and no sooner is he relieved from these domestic afflictions, that suddenly he is bereaved of his favorite wife - Joseph is violently torn from his embrace by his own sons - and at length Benjamin, the only object on which the affections of the aged father seemed to respose, must be yielded up to an uncertain destiny, and his cry is heard: "All these things are against me!" he repented -and accepted the severe judgement of God, reminding one of the words of Job: "Yea, though He slay me, yet will I trust Him!" Examples crowd upon us from every quarter; every neighborhood furnishes them! Haman was hung on the gallows he built for Mordecai. Dogs ate the carcass of Queen Jezebel, and licked up the blood of her husband, King Ahab. The Herods furnish fearful examples. But consider Pontius Pilate: many of us quote his name every Sunday in public worship: "Suffered under Pontius Pilatel" "Pilate, vacillating between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving policy, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed him to be Innocent; yet that his own loyalty to Caesar might not be suspected, he did violence to his conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship of Caesar, though it be at the expense of the most appalling crime. But how miserably he failed; and n ike-nut orders... offer good March 23 thru April 8.1 11