Page 2-Saturday, April 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily Former prof. addresses racism By TOM MIRGA Archie Singham, former University political scientist and current United Nations research scholar, told an audience of more than 100 at Schorling Auditorium last evening that a univer- sity obtaining an education out of the blood of innocent South African children had better stop to think. Singham's speech was sponsored by a coalition of local groups to com- memorate the tenth anniversary of the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike of 1969, which attempted to force the University administration to achieve a goal of 10 per cent minority admissions, a goal that has never been fully achieved. SINGHAM SAID the concerns of minority groups today are very similar "'5S555511. Needsa ride out of ton? Check the IE itlg classifieds under transportation to the concerns of those same groups in 1969. He claimed that the University is currently divided into two camps - those who are consumed by the pursuit of knowledge and those who would put that knowledge to practice at the ex- pense of risking their tenure. "The University has become the haven for Neanderthals, a place where individuals who practiced the pursuit of knowledge have been chased out," Singham said. The former Uniyersity professor said the BAM strike "was not a numbers game, but a challenge to those in- dividuals who preached knowledge to put their ideas to practice." SINGHAM SAID he did not intend practice to mean a search for new strikes, but "a call for the utilization of knowledge to improve the daily'lives of those individuals who are immediately around us." Those people who were opposed to the BAM strike had claimed that knowledge was the property of the owners of the University, ,Singham Church Worsbip Services FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120S. State St. (Crner of State and Huron) Worship Schedule: 8:30 a.m.-Holy Commutnion 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 ii a.m. +Choir Rehearsal Thursday-7:15 p.m. Ministers: pr. Donald B. Strobe -ev. Fred B. Maitland br. Gerald R. Parker Education Director: Rose McLean ntern: Carol Bennington STUDENTS Join us for Sunday School and Worship P CKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Pickard & 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 60(E. Huron at State, 668-6881 Rl'. W. Thomas Schomaker, Chaplain Lyiette Bracy. Mike Pennanen. Shkl-ey Polakowski aunday-5:00-Gathering for Sing- in Meal at 5:30. Sunday-6:15-Worship Fellowship. U IVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL Serving the Campus for LC'MS R ert Kavasch, Interim Pastor 15tt Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 and 668-8720 rouble Sunday Services-9=.15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 a.m. I2idweek Worship-Wednesday at 10:10 p.m. Midweek Bible Study-Thursday at 7:36 p.m. * * * AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER at FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 51ZE. Huron St.-663-9376 Jltuo Morikawa, Minister A. Theodore Kachel, Campus Minister Worship-10 a.m.-"Making Your Entrance"-Mr. Kachel. 5:30 p.m.-Dinner-Lenten Service- American Baptist Fellowship presenta- lion of Leroy Waterman's play. "Song of Songs. Join The., Daily 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 9: 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 lo: 7:30 p.m.-Lifestyle Assessment Group-at Lord of Light. Wednesday. April 11: 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 Sqith State St. Rev.Andrew Foster, Chaplain SUNDAY COMMUNITY EyENTS: 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 sponsors *rograms 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 8-Topic title: "How People Cope With Their Prejudices"- Yvonne Lockwood. Quote of the Week: "He flattereth himself on being a. man without any prejudices, and this pretension itself is a very great pre- judice."-Anatole France. * * * METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY C(IURCII 1769 Broadway Rev. Ted Richmond 3 p.m.-Worship with presentation by Representative Perry Bullard. For 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 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 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.R.B.C. * * *, CAMPUS CHAPEL (One Block North of S. University and Forest) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 10:00{a.m.-Palm Sunday Service. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. * * * a UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF TH E 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. * * * FULL GOSPEL HOLY GHOST BELIEVING MINISTRY at THE SALVATION ARMY CHAPEL 9S. 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 2:39,1 Cor. 12. Note: We will only be at the Salva- tion Army Chapel until April 18, New location unknown as of yet. said, and the freedom of education, "like motherhood, is an ideal that you don't play around with, especially when it is linked to property." Singham went on to say there were four basic demands made by the proponents of a new world economic order; the right to political and economic self determination, a call for the end of racism, an end to the economic exploitation of the third world by former colonial powers, and an end to the present world order that commits genocide by making it impossible for the children of the world to escape the spectre of starvation. Developer-s to appeal Kimberly en Hills case By ELEONORA DI LISCIA Despite Judge Benjamin Stanczyk's decision last Wednesday to put aside five acres of Ann Arbor's Kimberly Hills woods for a nature preserve, a battle over the 18-acre tract of land has not ended. The owners and developers of the land, Harry and Patricia Dion, have decided to appeal the judge's ruling. The case began when the Dions made plans to develop the 18-acre plot into 80 residential homes. In protest, neigh- borhood residents brought suit under the Michigan Environmental Protec- tion Act. For the first time, the act was applied to a tract of land inside a city and the judge put aside the fiv acres. IN AN ATTEMPT to resolve the con- flict, city officials offered the Dions $66,000 for the five acres plus two and one-half more, but the developers tur- ned down the offer. "We feel so strongly about individual property rights that we didn't want to talk about the park land because we want to see what the courts will do," Patricia Dion said. According to area resident Lex Grapentine, neighborhood represen- taties met with Mayor Louis Belcher and members of his staff to discuss a proposal to acquire the land. "PARTLY OUR feelings were that, while five acres was delightful, more than five acres would make an even better preserve," Grapentine said. "The second reason was that the Dions are, in fact, being financially screwed and any plan that we could come up with that would allow some financial recompense would be in order." Grapentine also pointed out that the city, as well as the neighborhood would benefit by creating another city park. And with $54,000 availble from city cof- fers, the two groups decided to pur- chase the land. But since the Dions are not interested in the offer and are now determined to appeal Judge Stanczyk's decision, there is little the city can do but fight for the land in court. "We'll take it to the federal Supreme Court if we have to," Grapentine said. "There was little doubt even before the judge's decision that one of the two sides would appeal.." Daily Official Bulletin SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1979 Daily Calendar: WUOM: Ralph Perlaez interviews Norman Jaspan, "White Collar Crime", 1 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3J20 SAB 763-4117 Michigan Economics for Human Development (formerly United Migrants for Opportunity). Openings for student coordinators in many locations throughout midwestern Michigan. Further details available. Bristol Regional Environmental Center, Bristol, Conn. Summer internship with background in Natural Sciences. Further details available. Deadline May 15. Columbia Gas System Service Corp., Columbus, Ohio. Number of openings for students in the following fields-chemical engr., must have com- pleted a B.S. and going on to grad school. Mech. and petroleum engr., students who have completed their junior year. Ralston Purina Company, St. Louis, Mi. Three summer intern openings. Computer Science Major/Math Major. Must have completed Sophomore year. Further details available. Hitchiner Manufacturing Co., Milford, N.H. Opening for strategic planning assistant. Will be in- volved in the data collection, analysis and final draf- ting of plans. Further details available. Excellent salary plus bonus. Rain Pro Irrigation, Pontiac, Mi. Openings for general labor, outdoor work. Also, opening for a foreman. Good salary. Further details available. In- stall sprinkler systems. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 149 Friday, April 6, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesda through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG A University student braves strong winds that whipped through town Thursday night and yesterday. The gusty winds plagued most of the Midwest, causing electrical blackouts and heavy property damage. Nuclea-r equipm.-ent sabotged in F rakce A. LA SEYNE-SUR-MER, France (AP) - Skillful saboteurs slipped into an in- dustrial plant- and blew up nuclear equipment bound for Iraq and two other countries early yesterday. An anonymous caller later said the bom- bers wanted to protect the human race from - future "Harrisburg catastrophes." The sabotage team, using three plastic explosive charges, damaged components for two experimental reactors destined for Iraq. Belgian- ordered equipment for loading nuclear fuel into a reactor, and a West German- ordered lid for a container to store radioactive materials at a nuclear plant, informed sources reported. DAMAGE WAS estimated in the millions of dollars. Three watchmen in the hangar-like assembly plant at the time of the 3 a.m. blasts escaped injury. French officials said there was no radioactive material in the plant - owned by the nuclear division of the private Mediterranean Naval and In- dustrial Construction firm - and no danger to this town on France's Mediterranean coast near Toulon. The motive for the bombing was un- clear. It came amid increasingly vocal' protest of the French government's decision not to slow down its nuclear energy program in the wake of the ac- cident at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant outside Harrisburg. But the French-Iraqi nuclear deal ,in itself has been the center of inter- national controversy. THE DEAL reportedly would send weapons-grade enriched uranium to the hardline, anti-Israeli regime in Bagh- dad and is known to have caused anxiety in Washington and in Jerusalem. A telephone caller told the Paris newspaper Le Monde a previously unknown "Group of French Ecologists" was responsible for the bombing and that it had "neutralized machines dangerous to human life." S. African urban guerrilla executed despite protests PRETORIA (Reuter)-South Africa executed black urban guerrilla Solomon Mahlangu at dawn yesterday despite a flood of protest and appeals for clemency from world leaders. Black inmates accused of trying to overthrow the government sang songs of revenge in their cells after hearing that Mahlangu was hanged on the gallows of Pretoria Central Jail. THE 23-YEAR-OLD member of the banned African National Congress (ANC) was sentenced, to death for his part in the killing of two white men during a 1977 gunbattle with police. He was secretly buried after a funeral service attended by close relatives at the jail. The authorities refused to disclose the location of the grave. One prisoner, Zephania Mothopeng, a founding member of the outlawed Pan- African Congress, told a court that on learning of Mahlangu's death he joined other prisoners in a song. f "THEY KILLED Mahlangu. The ; Boers (South Africans of Dutch descent) are dogs and they will die like dogs," they sang. Mr. Mothopeng, 65, is one. of 18 men: who have ben on trial at Bethal, 125 miles southwest of Pretoria, for 16 mon- ths. Study says minor leaguers need recreation to win "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 One day, Abraham, Friend of God, was sitting in his tent door in "the heat of the day." They tell us.it gets mighty hot in that land, 120 degrees or more. However, not far from where he was sitting, and not so long afterwards, probably 15 or 16 hours, thentemperature suddenly jumped up maybe ten,,. housand degrees, or a million, as it began raining fire and -rimstone from heaven! understand it gets so hot where a nuclear blast occurs the rocks and sand melt, run together and cake up! It appears, though, that the fire that fell from heaven told about in 1st Kings 18-38 was even hotter, for it not only melted but consumed stones and dust! Note the powerful effect of the prayer and pleading of God's Friend, Abraham, who a few hours before "Stood before the Lord": The Angel told Lot to get his folks and get out of the city. As Lot fooled around killing time the Angel said, hurry it up, and getout of here: "I cannot do anything till thou come thither"-into another city! Abraham's prayer made the Angel powerless until Lot got out "1 CANNOT DO ANYTHING ... I" First, he must be "an Angel of deliverance" before he could be "an Angel of destruction!" 4z %a.a16-99I' called "The Friend of God." In Luke 17:28-30 we read these words of Christ: "LIKEWISE ALSO AS IT WAS IN THE DAYS OF LOT: THEY DID EAT, THEY DRANK, THEY BOUGHT, THEY SOLD, THEY PLANTED, THEY BUILDED: BUT THE SAME DAY THAT LOT WENT OUT OF SODOM IT RAINED FIRE AND BRIMSTONE FROM HEAVEN, AND DESTROYED THEM ALL. EVEN THUS SHALL IT BE IN THE DAY THE SON OF MAN IS REVEALED!" We are sure like Sodom in our eating, drinking, buying, selling, planting, and building. But there were other things Sodom was doing for which she has been noted and in- famous down through the about 4,000 years since that horrible and hot "rainy day"! She has been noted for her sex crimes, deviates, perverts, etc. One great crime takes it name from Sodom. This 19th Chapter of Genesis reveals that the homosexuals actually undertook to attack the Angels of God and they had to use their supernatural power to keep them off, striking them with blindness-their descendants of our day are grossly blind to righteousness, purity and decency! Sex perversions, rampant all around in our day, excused by By BETH ROSENBERG The relationship between work and non-work activities affects job perfor- mance, according to a study of a minor league baseball team by two University researchers. During a 128-game regulation season, Mitch Marks, a second year graduate student in observational psychology, and Phillip Mirvis, a 1978 University graduate who currently teaches at Boston University, studied a Class A, Illinois-based baseball team. "SOMETIMES T HE team bus arrived at the field five minutes before game time and the players didn't get batting practice or a good night's sleep," Marks remarked. "Environ- mental conditions definitely affect per- formance." One variable important to job per-. formance, Marks said, was location of the hotel-whether or not it was near a after work, and something to do bet- ween games. "Players fresh out of high school had the biggest adjustment because they were used to baseball as a recreational activity. Suddenly it's their job and cen- tral purposein life," Marks explained. Runs scored during games were used as a performance measure. Marks said he was against the run factor because he was 'not convinced that an 8-5 game is better played than a 1-0 game." ANOTHER FACTOR lending creden- ce to the environmental influences theory is the team's won-loss record. The quality of the opposing team had less influence on the game's outcome than the environmental affect. A comparable study of a major league team, Marks said, would have different variables because of first class travel and room accom- modations, higher salaries, different incentives, and glamourous cities. "To do the study, we'd have to ap-