Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY I- - -l _ -- -- NEW CONCEPTS IN THEATRE 'ROUND AS A HOLE' by SKIP STORM 'A TOUCH OF MIME' by DONNA KOST and CONNIE RATHBURN FRI. & SAT., FEB. 1 & 2 CC w'c/ lv'4ft£.enhice4j - - ----- - --------- - t I $1 DONATION 8 p.m. Barbour Gym U I I U 'I NOTICE Non-Native Speakers of English All Speakers of English as a Second Language* Are Invited to Take Part in an Experimental Test of English Language Proficiency to be Given in RACK- HAM LECTURE HALL AT 7:00 P.M. ON THE 6th OF FEBRUARY. You Will Receive $5.00 for Approx- imately 1 1a/-2 Hours of Your Time. If Interested You Must Call and Register at the Following Num- ber: 764-2416 on or before February 6th. *No ELI Students Currently Enrolled in the Intensive English Courses Are Eligible for the Test at This Time. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Min- isters Services at 10:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH, 1917 Washtenaw Erwin A. Gaede, Minister Church School and Services at 10:30 a.m. - Sermon topic: "The Sustaining Community." Adult Forum-9:30 a.m. Discus- sion topic: "What Has Changed in the Sheriff's Dept?" Speaker: Fred Postill, Sheriff. BETHEL A.M.E. CHURCH John A. Woods, Pastor 900 Plum St. Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Church Phone-NO 3-3800 Services: Sunday School-9:00 a.m. Morning Worship--0:30 a.m. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Dr. T. L. Trost, Jr. Associate Ministers: Dennis R. Brophy and Howard F. Gebhart. 9 a.m.-Morning Prayer. 10 a.m. -Worship Service and Church School. * * * NORTH SIDE COMMUNITY CHURCH 929 Barton Dr. Welcomes University students wishing to worship in a Christian family community to join us week- ly. For additional information, transportation, call Don Yost, Pas- tor, 662-6351. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (Lutheran Church- Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Morning Services at 9:15 and at 10:30. Sunday Morning Bible Study at 9:15. Wednesday Evening Worship at 10:00. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 306 S. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere, Jr. Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m. Sundays. Coffee Hour-11:30 a.m. Sundays. Rehearsal for a Service of Wor- ship at 5:00, supper at 6:00. Biible Study Luncheon noon Wed- nesdays. Holy Communion 5:15 p.m. Wed- nesdays. Banner Workshop 10:00 a.m. Sat- urday. 10:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and All college students and young Sermon. adults are cordially invited to any WOMEN Thinking about the next steps in your life? Come to Personal Planning Worshop Feb. 16-17 Call 761-0991 4-7 p.m. or 761-2274 A WEEKLY LATE NIGHT ' P PRESENTATION OF F A FEATURE FILMS I CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Ave. (1 Block South of Bus Stop) I Worship Services at 10 a.m. and 16 p.m. Everyone welcome. 12:00 noon - Canterbury House Eucharist. 7:00 p.m. -- Holy Eucharist in Chapel. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA- TION-State at Huron and Wash. Sunday, Feb. 3: Sermon by Dr. Donald B. Strobe: "The Fleas Comes with the Dog." 8:30-9:00 a.m.-Communion Serv- ice. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. - Worship Services. 9:00-12:30 a.m.-Nursery Care. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. -- Church School (thru Grade 5). 9:30-10:30 a.m. - Church School (thru Grade 8). 10:30-11:00 a.m. - Coffee-Conver- and all activities. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC, LCA) 801 S. Forest at Hill Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Morning: Study Class-9:15 a.m. Worship Service-10:30 a.m. Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m. Program-7:00 p.m. * * * ST. AIDAN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH North Side Presbyterian Church 1679 Broadway-across from Baits Dr., North Campus 8:30 and 10:00 a.m. -HolyI charist. 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. Child care provided. Eu- Saturday, February 2, 1974 Grffitls outlines neW welfare reform plan (Continued from Page 1) for all is a wonderful ideal, but we of work and work-incentive pro- are far from it: If the jobs are grams was thoroughly discussed partially inadequate we s h a u I d from both the podium and the supplement the worker's income audience. when he is employed. We should "People scoff at work require- not deprecate the job. Our aa- ments," Griffiths s i g h e d. "They; tional guilt can be put to better think of them as window dressing." use." She cited data that found cur- The ideal welfare plan must be rent work programs to be overly a cash program, Griffiths said, expensive and highly ineffective. funded and run by-the federal gov It seems a near impossible task to ernment. She suggested $3,336 as keep track of job searches, health a minimum figure for an American and service w o r k requirements, family of four. checks on job refusals, wages and "We ought to pay sufficient wel- dismissals. I fare benefits so we could tax some of it back. The best way of teach- "YES," GRIFFITHS said in re- ing money management and re- sponse to an elderly lady, "there sponsibility is to pay taxes," she are reasonable grounds for object- said. ing to these programs. Present ones are hardly a howling success. THE CONGRESSWOMAN point- But in order to add to benefits, I ed out that no welfare plan can believe people must be expected be made perfect as the objectives to work at whatever jobs they can themselves are necessarily in con- find." flict. When discussion came to the spe- "If my remarks s e e m hard- cific question of what sorts of jobs headed," she smiled, "it is because w e r e appropriate, the speaker's fighting over these questions is answer was quick and straightfor- forthcoming." ward. Griffiths talked about the welfare "There has been a great amount program bill she presented to the of nonsensical liberal rhetoric on President through the Conference this subject," she stated. "Sup- Committee. Nixon has labeled the posedly dead-end or non-meaning- bill "costly" and "un-American." ful jobs are not considered good "ANYONE WHO looked at the enough." program would vote for my bill,' 'she said. "It is far superior to aiiy SHE POINTED to the millions of other bill." As the audience laugh- working men and women already ed approvingly at such confidence, in these jobs and then said de- she shrugged, saying, "Well, one cisively, "Meaningful work lives has to be honest, you know." Smokers' clinic helps students 'kick the habit' TEE 3SE11 Ct I i .y 1 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS ALL SEATS $1.50 JOHN VOIGHT in "THE REVOLUTIONARY" 11:15 p.m. TH- Presents CRICKET SMITH LIVE MUSIC and DANCING SATURDAY & SUNDAY Feb. 2 & 3 -IE SCENE 341 S. Main St. sation-Fellowship. * * * Broadcast on WNRS (1290) AM CANTERBURY HOUSE and WNRZ (103) FM from 11:00- 218 N. Division noon. 665-0606 The Church of the Wesley Foun- Holy Eucharist at Noon in St. dation. Andrew's Church. PARK TERRACE Fall Rentals 848 TAPPAN at OAKLAND Deluxe 1-2-3 Bedroom Apts, . Fully furnished & carpeted " Garbage disposals e Locked storage' Live-in resident manager 4 Private underground parking-free @ 24 hr. emergency service 0 Burglar alarm system for each apt. 0 Cable TV-free See Brent or Sharon Clark, Apt. 10-769-5014 1 .1 1 . 1 I im Ml 11 I I eetleboards of AmeriCa has designs on your coyr if you own aVW bug (any year) you can get an outrageous paint job FREE and Beetleboards of America will pay you to drive as you ordinarily do. There's nearly nothing else for you to do, except write immediately for more information. Or Col Beetleboards of America, Inc. (213) 7785 Sunset Blvd. 876-7517 Los Angeles, California 90046 Collect .x -- I SUNDAY -FEBRUARY 3v JERRY JEFF WALKER 2 SHOWS: 9:00 & 11:30 PM TICKETS: $3.50 (ADVANCE) - $4.00 (AT THE DOOR) Tickets on sale at Recordland (next to the movies at Briarwood), Discount Records (South University, Ann Arbor), World Headquarters (Maynard Street, Ann Arbor), and Nu Sounds Records (4th Street, Ann Arbor) I- E i I } (Continued from Page 1) to smoke. The cue's strength (or degree of stimulus 'control') is weakened through repeated resist- ance to smoking. "The important thing is to hang on," Commorato said, "and com- bat one or two 'target areas' per week. Hopefully the smoker will learn to respond to the telephope's ring without the smoking urge." As part of the program, the smokers give themselves daily re- wards if they successfully fight the "urge." These rewards can be any favorite activity that'seusual- ly done- infrequently. Dinner out or a movie are obvious rewards, but cheaper thrills are equally re- inforcing. "A BACK RUB or bubble bath can work just as well," Commor- ato notes, "Or engaging in other desirable activities onga contin- gency basis." This could include calling a good friend, or watching TV. When smokers associate non-smoking be- havior with positive rewards, they are well on the road to recovery. But back-slapping, however nice, cannot go on forever. What hap- pens to the smoker when the pro- gram ends? "I HOPE THE client's natural environments will have enough re- wards to sustain them," Commora- Schools teach your kids how to read and write. We teach them how to save lives. us The American Red Cos Wy dotit know where well be needed next You dont either the Clinic's clients, along with Commorato, stress the importance of social support for quitting smok- ing. The program even suggests bringing a friend to meetings, or having them "watch" at home. Commorato will keep track of clients for a three-month "follow- up" period. She will call clients once a week for the first month, and every other week for the re- maining two. During the calls, cli- ents will give progress reports of their smoking behavior. "A LOT OF RESEARCH sug- gests that peoplein programs who revert to smoking will do it within three months," Commorato said. The Clinic's follow-up program, then, is especially important for its graduates. Commorato, a social worker in Flint, has run the program twice before with considerable success. In each case, two out of three smokers quit smoking completely. "A number of students had re- quested a program," said Cheryl Lang, Program Director for Health Service and co-ordinator for the Clinic. "Many suggestions, through our 'Input Service', can be effective." THE CLINIC'S first four mem- bers seem optimistic about the program. "I know I can quit," one stud- ent said confidently, "It isn't hard, but I get so irritable." Another smoker was worried a bout eating. "The last time I quit I gained ten pounds, and I'm just getting them off now," she said. THESE AND OTHER problems will be worked out between Com- morato and her clients, from 7:30- 9:00 Mondays and Wednesdays at the Health Service. The program is open to the pub- lic, and will run again pending in- terest and available funds from the Health Service. As one smoker put it; "Cigar- ettes,are expensive, they taste aw- ful, and I hate being dependent on them.". PERHAPS OTHER smokers can quit with the "Smoker's Clinic", an alternative to nagging, disap- pearing ashtrays, and deteriorat- ing health. JERRY JEFF WALKER on MCA Records-wherever records & tapes are sold . t 2333 E.Stadium Blvd. beloww_ Tricky Dick's for information call 663-1212 An-rbr icia to said. The smokers' friends play large role in this process. Two a of if- 11 jL 3 1 L- ""r"t. r°'i , Haindyl M. Love 47 tory, and Let B'e... 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