Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Soturday, December 7, 1914 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, December 7, 19 1'~I CiUtcA w'hkAi . 1e*ice4 Unemployment hits 6.5 per cent UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Services at 9:15 and at 10:30 a.m. 25th Anniversary of dedication of Chapel. The Rev. Roland Boehnke, guest preacher Sunday. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15. Sunday, De.. 8 at 7:00 p.m.- Candlelight song service featur- ing Christmas Canta by chapel choir, "The Song of the Birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ"; four chorus solo voices and two vio- lins, by Marc-Antoine Charpen- tier (1634-1704). Reception after the service. Midweek Worship Wednesday Evening at 10:00. WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR FRIENDS MEETING (QUAKERS) 1420 Hill St.-668-9341 (if no answer, 769-3354, 971-4875, 665-2683) Silent Meeting for Worship- Sunday, 10-11 a.m. First Day School, nursery/ high, 10-11 a.m. AdultForum, 11-12. Potluck every first Sunday, Business meeting every third Sunday after worship. D a i 1 y Morning Meditation (546 Walnut St.), 8:30-9 a.m. Wednesday Sack Lunch (1073 East Engineering), 12-1 p gn. Worship-sharing Groups (in homes), Tues. / Wed. / 'Ihurs. eves. Friday Evening Family Night (1420 Hill St.), 7:30-11 p.m - stories, discussions, games, crafts, singing and dancing for all ages. American F r ie n d s Service Committee (AFSC), 1414 Bill St., 761-8283. Bail & Prison Reform; 761- 8283, 761-8331. Friends International Co-op,1 1416 Hill St., 761-7435. Friends L a k e Community, 19,720 Waterloo Rd., Chelsea, 475-8775. Movement for a New So:'iety (MNS), 665-6083. World Peace Tax Fund, Box 1447, Ann Arbor. CAMPUS CHAPELj Pastor: Don Postema 10:00 a.m.--Morning Service. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere, Jr. "Where Christ, Campus and Community meet" Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00 am. Other programs for young adults: Sunday, 12:00-Brunch. Wednesday, 5:15-Holy Com- munion. Wednesday, 6: 00-Supper. Friday, 12:00-Luncheon and Bible Study. y* * * ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekend Masses: Saturday: 5 p.m. and midight. Sunday: 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and S p.m. (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Student Chapel) 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St. Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Service at 10.30 a.in. * * * UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 a.m.-Church School. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. * * * FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Ronald Cary, Campus Minister 502 E. Huron St. 10:00 a.m.-Worship. 11:00 a.m.-Church School. 7:00 p.m.-Contemporary Wor- ship. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.-Amer- ican Baptist Student Fellowship. All students welcome. * * * FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Service and Sunday School-10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meet- ing-8:00 p.m. Child Care-Sunday, under 2 years; Wednesday, through 6 years. Reading Room-306 E. Lib- erty, 10-9 Mon., 10-S Tues.-Sat. "The Truth That Heals" - * * * ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH, 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. 10:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship--11:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 5305. Fifth David Graf, Minister 3:00 p.m. - Sunday Worship Service. Students Welcome. For information or transpor- tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494. CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division-665-0606 Events This Week: Sunday, Dec. 8, 12:00 noon- Holy Eucharist with a meal fol- lowing. Tuesday, Dec. 10, 8:00 p.m.-- "Artists in the Church," an eve- ning with Ralph Carskadden and Steve Iverson. Friday, Dec. 13, 8:00 p.m.- Decking the Hall with greens. * * * BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church School. * * * ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. (one block west of U of M Stadium) Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Need Transportation? C a 11 662-9928. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH State at Huron and Washington 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Services, Church School for all ages. Nursery Care. Sermon: "The Risks God Takes," by Dr. Donald B. Strobe. 10:30-11:00 a.m. - Fellowship Hour in Wesley Lounge. Worship Service is broadcast on WNRS (1290) AM and WNRZ (103) FM from 11:00 to noon each Sunday. WESLEY FOUNDATION: Sunday, Dec. 8: 6:00 p.m. - Supper, Pine Room. 6:45 p.m. - Tree-trimming Party and Celebration, Wesley Lounge. (Continued from Page 1) ministration would soon seek' new anti - recession legislation. Nessen acknowledged that un- employment had increased fast- er than expected since Ford un- veiled his economic program Oct. 8, but gave no indication of what new steps might be taken. ALTHOUGH the main thrust of the administration's economic policy is still to control infla- tion, Ford's economic advis- ers said earlier this week they were preparing a new list of options, including tax cuts if needed next year to pump up the economy. Speaking in behalf of Ford, Nessen urged quick congression- al passage of administration proposals to authorize an addi- tional 83,000 public service jobs' and to give the unemployed an added 13 weeks of jobless bene- fits. Had Congress acted by now,I these proposals would have au- tomatically gone into effect yes- terday, triggered by the Novem- ber unemployment rate. AFL-CIO President George Meany called the statistics "the disastrous results" of former President Richard Nixon's eco- nomic policies and urged Ford and Congress to "take emer- gency steps to put the nation back to work." Meany called for, among oth- er things, lower interestrates, new housing programs, the re- lease of billions of dollars for public works construction pro- grams and the enactment of legislation to create needed jobs. In other economy - related1 news:I O Treasury Secretary Wil-a liam Simon conceded that ad- ministration proposals to dereg- ulate the price of natural gas appear doomed and raised the prospect of blackouts from gas shortages; " Federal banking agencies increased the amount of interest which may be paid on relative- ly small savings deposits if the money is kept on deposit for a long term; * Some of the nation's coal miners began returning to work following settlement of their' strike. Many coal firms said maintenance work was under way although not enough men had shown up yet to begin pro- duction; !Stock prices tumbled to a 12-year low with the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks closing off 9.46 at 577.60, the lowest level since Oct. 26, 1962, and O The Council on Wage and Price Stability asked food stores not to mark up the price of items once they have been plac- ed on the shelves. Ellsberg reports once-secret documents stolen from home - Low-cost care offered (Continued from Page 1) the same manner, employing two General Practitioners. Both facilities are non-profit organiza- tions run by the same board of directors. The Free People's Clinic, be- gun in 1971 and growing ever since, offers free medical care three nights a week. Begun with a small group of volunteers, it now has nine doc- tors, each working one night a week in a relaxed, informali manner. IN ADDITION, before their medical examinations, patients spend half an hour talking to a staff member, or advo gate, about symptoms, and medical history. "Sometimes I get patients who are pretty uneasy - they just don't trust doctors. We try and make them feel comfort- able," said advocate Kurt Sobel. But as Carla Rappaport, the clinic's coordinator, pointed out, the clinic can only be "a band aid, when what is actually need- ed is major surgery." THESE TWO low cost medi- cal organizations cannot ade- quately serve the local com- munity's health needs. As in the rest of the country, medicine in Ann Arbor is nearing a state of crisis, and only nation-wide, long range changes will ulti- mately alter the situation. An obvious solution to the health care dilemma, and one which is becoming an increas- ingly controversial issue is some form of socialized medicine. Or, as it is termed in medical cir- cles, National Health Insurance (NHI). But unless properly institut ad, it could possibly create nigher costs for each individual, with- out an accompanying improve- ment in health care. THE CREATION of a large federal bureaucracy, and if the government finds it necessary, added taxes, could inflate the' total patient cost. The September issue of Phy- sicians Management warns of "plummetting health care qual- ity," if NHI becomes a reality, because few people will be at- tracted to a medical profession controlled by the government. Pierce indicated the present Medicaid system as an exam-# ple of cumbersome government-I controlled medical care. "T H E R E' S A tremendous1 amount of paper work in- volved," he explained. Medicaid pays physicians by' the number and type of services done for each patient on Medi- caid. Pierce went on to suggest that a health care plan financed by a fee per capita system instead of a fee for services readered .system would be much less complicated. "IF A DOCTOR were to re- ceive x number of :collars for x number of people, it would cut down on the paperworx,"' he said. "Each person would be as- signed to a particular clipic, where they would receive allf their medical care. Doctors would be paid by the number! of people they take care o, not what they do to them. If pa-' tients didn't like Athe treatment they were getting, they could go somewhere else," he ex- plained. Pierce admitted this plan car- ried some potential abuses, such# as over-utilization. "BUT THIS is not very sub- stantial. Seeing the doctor is! not how most people get theirl willies," he .said. Presently the government is I considering several health care plansand recently President! Ford asked Congress, "Why don't we write-and I ask with the greatest spirit of coopera- tion-a good health bill on the statute books before Congress adjourns?" But the Congressional Ways and Means Committee, charged by Ford to come up with a viable health plan, disagreed on a minor point, and work on the bill will not continue until the new Congress meets in January. Nevertheless, the public will soon be presented with a medi- cal care plan, and if not this year, then certainly before the ""' 1ational election. SAN FRANCISCO (P)-Daniel Ellsberg, the central figure in: the Pentagon papers case, says once-secret government docu- ments were stolen from his Mill Valley home by a burglar Oct. 1. Police later recovered the papers, and a U.S. attorney says he would like to see them. ELLSBERG hinted yesterday that the papers might not have been taken by an ordinary bur- glar, but police said they doubt- ed it. "It appears to be just a plain, dumb, routine burglary," said William Walsh, the Mill Valley chief of police. However, Ellsberg told a news conference: "When a burglar shows interest in my papers, especially in regard to my trial, it r a i s e s questions." Other things also were taken at his home 10 miles north of San Francisco, he said. Slate jobles rate soars (Continued from Page 1) ing layoffs announced by the auto industry. Thousands were laid off after Nov. 15, the cutoff date for re- porting unemployment data. Asked if he exnected the state1 unemployment figure to hit 10 per cent, Taylor said: "It will come very close to that." THE STATE'S jobless figure hit 10.2 per cent in the summer when tens of thousands of ctu- dents flooded the unemployment total. It leveled off to 7.3 per cent in' September and held steady at that level in Octooar. In the Detroit area, which bore the brunt of the auto lay- offs, the jobless total grew by one per cent-to 9.1 per cent with the total number of un- employed persons in the six- county metro area increasing by 19,700 to 170,700. The Ford Motor Co. said yes- terday it will idle still more workers temporarily next week at three assembly and 'hree manufacturing plants ind raise the number on indefinite lay- offs to 17,075. ELLSBERG said the burglar flown to California to check on left this note on his desk: the matter. "Dear Daniel. Not a word of this to anyone. Much trouble BUT ELLSBERG said the will be avoided if you negotiate papers were his personal prop- properly. Don't slip-soon you'll erty and he would go to court know." to keep them. Police refused to say how "The federal government Las they recovered the papers. No absolutely no interest in the arrests have been made in the personal papers or property of case. MrsEllsberg " Browning said. When police disclosed that O>r sole interest is to deter- several purported governmentr mine if any of the documents documents were among the are classified or secret. If we p a p e r s, U.S. Atty. James find any are classified, our in- Browning said the government wanted to see them. A Pentagon tention is to keep them and not attorney, Frank Bartimo, was return them." Gill drops out of sight (Continued from Page 1) gency and that he could be bill- ed at 2455 Twin Lakes Drive in Ypsilanti. GILL'S reservation at the St. Clair was made before his May 10 arrival by a "Mrs. Jdnn.son," who gave a return phone num- ber identical to that of an apart- ment Gill lived in while a Ml:cn- igan student. Gill later told hotel officals to bill him at the address 2015 Commerce, Ann Arbor, under the business name Gill, Smith and Associates, Preston staed. That firm has been involved in record and concert promos ion in southeast Michigan. From the St. Clair, Gill ap- parently moved to the Broad- walk Apartments, located in up- town Chicago. But apartment manager Dan Crowe said that Gill had left Broadwalk at the end of October, owing a couple months' rent. IT WAS at the Boardwalk Apartments that The Daily lo- cated Gill three months ago when SGC first voted to con- sider pressing criminal charges against him. SGC had already filed a civil suit in Washtenaw County Circuit Court during August. And according to Robert Ho- ward, a supervisor for the Of- fice of Planning and Develop- ment, Illinois Department of Corrections, Gill left his post as a survey clerk "months ago." Lessem would not specify ex- actly when SGC had attempted to serve Gill. "They (the pro- cess servers) waited outside the door and around the apartment, but no one showed up," Les- sem said. 'After all, we're deal- ing with someone who eluded the FBI for a year and a half." GILL resigned the Council presidency January 10, citing Dressing academic reasons. He had been elected SGC's first black nresident the previous spring. In 1971, Gill was paroled after serving eight months of a two-year sentence for an in- terstate auto theft conviction. On March 21, SGC announced that it intende" to file civil pro- ceedings to recover $15,833.99 that it claimed Gill had spent dring his term without proper Council authorization. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Graduation . nnfouncemeflts + orGRADUATING SENIORS ARE NOW ON SALE Information Desk, Main Lobby L.S.A. Bldg. Tired of the Liberal Orthodoxy on Campus? THE INTERCOLLEGIATE STUDIES INSTITUTE provides A THOUGHTFUL ALTERNATIVE The Intercollegiate Studies Institute is dedicated to furthering the traditional values inherent in Western civilization: individual liberty, limited government, private enterprise, the rule of law, and the spiritual foundation necessary to these values. ISI seeks to make available to the interested student the best scholarship of our common heritage through the programs listed below. *THE INTERCOLLEGIATE REVIEW-Students and professors are eligible for a free subscription to the quarterly review of scholar- ship and opinion. 'THE ACADEMIC REVIEWER-Also available at no cost is the biannual review of books. *GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS-Recipients of this highly competi- tive fellowship are awarded a $2000 grant and payment of tuition at the school of their choice.! 'LECTURE BUREAU-ISI can arrange at your school and fund lectures or seminars with the nation's leading thinkers. *SUMMER SCHOOLS-Scholarships are available for ISI's week-long summer symposia, feld throughout the country. *CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES and FACULTY ASSOCIATES- Students and professors volunteer to promote ISI's programs on campus. For more information on these and other services, mail the coupon below to: Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc., 14 S. Bryn Mawr " n _.__ ax --- _--- -___ ° nn l n Econ bldg. burns I 1 4 M^' 4 . . x (Continued from Page 1) The Economics Department, however, was more concerned with the temporary displace- ment of those who worked in the office. "Hiring those guys to put in the heating system was like hiring Attila the Hun," com- plained W. H. Anderson, whose office was slightly damaged in the blaze. "I sort of thought this sort of thing would happer, so I al- ways brought home the manu- script of a book I'm working on," he said. Breaking his usual pattern, Anderson brought home a load of bluebooks yesterday instead of the manuscript. Don't Forget: LOU LANDAU HAT WEINER HOOTER ALBERT DR. K MOSES MORROW SP. FR. BASS WELCOME YOu TONIGHT AT THEIR PARTY He breathed a sigh of relief, "When I got the message, I was scared as can be. But, fortunately, I didn't lose any- thing. As long as the building doesn't catch fire again to- night, I'll be all right. Profesor Gary Saxonhouse, whose office suffered the most damage, was equally uncon- cerned. His only remark (other than "what a mess") concerned long held faculty views that the ramshackle old building should have been burnt down long ago. "This year they finally put a lot of money into the build- ing," he said. "Everybody was sort of getting used to the building. So it caught fire." One professor, who was teach- ing in the building at the time, looked down the hall and saw smoke pouring out of the hall- way near his office. "My QGod, I thought, this is it," he said. "All those years of research and work." He ran down to the office, looked around, put on his hat and coat and walked out. "Well, I thought about grab- bing the books," he conceded, "but I didn't. The whole build- ing could have gone up at any- time." A fine machine MELCOR Many scientifc calcu- laosc etesame SC 535"chip." Ask for our free report on scientifics. * full scientific * scientific notation A Great Warranty! 0 l10digit If anything goes wrong " parentheses with your calculator for the y e a r it is under * trig functions warranty, we will get * degrees or radians the calculator repaired DON'T SIGN YOUR LIFE AWAY! A 4 month Winter Term lease is one of the reasons Wes Wolverine came to University Towers Apartments. A 12 month lease hurts. I i