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.

January 21, 1978 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1978-01-21

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

Page 2--Saturday, January 21, 1978-The Michigan Daily
urc orshipervices

U.S. Attorney Marston

UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Presently Meeting at the Ann Arbor Y,
530 S. Fifth
David Graf, Minister
Students Welcome.
For information or transportation:
663-3233 or 426-3808.
10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship.
.* * *.
UNIVERSITY CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
409 S. Division
Steve Bringardner, Pastor
Church School-9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship-11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship--6:00 p.m.
ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL
(Catholic)
331 Thompson--663-0557
Weekend Masses:
Saturday-10p.m.
Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30
a.in., noon, and 5 p.m.
North Campus-9:30 a.m.
UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH
1001 E. Huron
calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers
10 a.m.-Morning Service.
5 p.ro.-Informal Worship.
Join The Daily

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
662-4466
Sunday:
8:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship.
12:00-Coffee Hour.
LORD OF LIGHT
LUTHERAN CHURCH
(the campus ministry of the ALC-LCA)
Gordon Ward, Pastor
801 S. Forest at Hill St.
Sunday Worship at,11:00 a.m.
Thursday evening Bible Study on
North Campus-8:00 p.m.
* * *
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? Call 662-9928.
UNITY OF ANN ARBOR
Sunday Services & Sunday School-
10:30 a.n.
at Howard Jonhson's
2380 Carpenter Rd.
Dial-a-Thought: 971-5230
Where people of all ages learn to ex-
press their inner potentials. For more
information call 971-5262.

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
State at Huron and Washington
Dr. Donald B. Strobe
The Rev. Fred B. Maitland
The Rev. E. Jack Lemon
Worship Services at 9:00 and 11:00.
Church School at 9:00 and 11:00.
Adult Enrichment at 10:00.
WESLEY FOUNDATION
UNITED METHODIST
CAMPUS MINISTRY
W. Thomas Shomaker,
Chaplain/Director
Extensive programming for under-
grads and grad students.
* * *
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
CHAPEL (LCMS)
1511 Washtenaw Ave.-663-5560
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday Services at 9:15 and 10:30
a.m.
Sunday Bible Study at 9:15a.m.
Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10:00
p:m.
* * *
CAMPUS CHAPEL--A Campus
Ministry of the Christian
Reformed Church
1236 Washtenaw Ct.-668-7421
Rev. Don Postema, Pastor
Sunday Services at 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Coffee hour-11:15 a.m.
* * *
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister
608 E. William, corner of State
Worship Service-10:30 a.m.
Sunday Morning Worship-10 a.m.
* * *

hands ii
(Continued from Page 1)
gressman's law firm had been sub-
poenaed on Dec. 16 and that Eilberg
had hired a prominent criminal
lawyer in Philadelphia to represent
him.
There have been charges from
some members of Congress that the
Carter administration was playing
politics with law enforcement and
might even be engaged in a coverup.
THE LATEST blast came yester-
day from Rep. Ron Mazzoli (D-Ky.),
who sent a telegram to Carter in
which he said he would urge the
House Judiciary Committee "to ex-
amine this matter thoroughly as a
phase of its review of the budget and
operations of the Justice Depart-
ment."
Bell sent three Justice Department
officials to Philadelphia last weekend
to determine the status of investiga-
tions by Marston's office. When the
investigators returned to Washing-
ton, Justice Department sources
confirmed for the first time that
Eilberg and Flood were under inves-
tigation.
THE ADMINISTRATION has re-
placed most of the 94 U.S. attorneys
since taking office a year ago. It has
portrayed Marston as a capable ad-
ministrator but a lawyer lacking in
trial experience.
Justice Department officials have
said privately they believe Marston
has claimed credit for investigative
ground work done before he took
office.
Marston is a former aide to Sen.
Richard Schweiker (R-Pa.).
Meanwhile, Schweiker told a news
conference that with the firing of
Marston, "the President and attor-
ney ; general have put the White
House seal of approval on- a sordid
plot to purge an effective prosecutor
because he did the honest job he
swore to do."
Asked if he were accusing Carter
and Bell of trying to stop an investi-
gation, he replied: "I certainly am.
What hope is there of restoring trust
in government if an American Presi-
dent who cloaks himself in robes of
purity not only tolerates but partici-
pates in such dirty business?"

this resignation

Look for:
Th e GerbilMagaz/ie
ON SALE NOW
in the Fishbowl
and Campus-Area Stores
Read and Use Daily Classifieds
RU H
JAN. 22-26 7-10 p.m.
Trigon f
FraternityW
1617 Washtenaw
"A stone's throw from the 'rock''

AMERICAN BAPTIST
CAMPUS CENTER AND
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
502 E. Huron-663-9376
0. Carroll Arnold, Minister
Ronald E. Cary, Minister-
Worship-10 a.m.; Bible

Study-11

a.m.
Fellowship Meeting-Wednesday at
7:45 p.m.
CANTERBURY HOUSE
(Episcopal Student Foundation)
218 N. Division
665-0606
Chaplain: Rev. Andrew Foster
Choral Evensong Sunday evenings at
7:00 p.m. at St. Andrew Episcopal
Church, 306 N. Division.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw
Sunday Services and Sunday School
-10:30 a.m.-
Wednesday Testimony Meeting-8:00
p.m.
Child CareSuniday-under 2 years.
Christian Science Reading Room-,
206 E. Liberty, 10-5 Monday-Saturday;
closed Sundays.
Dr. Paul C. Uslan
Full Contact Lens Service
Cod Sterilization Soft Lens
54 hurch St.-769- 1222

AP Photo
U.S. ATTORNEY David Marston arrives in Washington yesterday to discuss
his impending dismissal with Attorney General Bell. Bell later said Marston's
dismissal was "final."

Sadat rejects U.S..

. .

efforts
(Continued from Page 1)
Facing reporters afterward, he said:
"Whevever Israel agrees to the prin-
ciples not to tread on other's land or
sovereignty, everything can be re-
sumed again. The door to peace is not
closed.":
SADAT SAID Israeli insistence on
keeping Jewish settlements in the Sinai
Peninsula and other occupied Arab
lands were "a joke" and said Israel
must abandon such an idea before
peace talks can continue.
Dayan, interviewed on Israeli tele-
vision, praised American peacemaking
efforts in the Mideast as crucial and
constructive but said that if Sadat does
not compromise on his demands: "It
looks like deadlock."
A senior U.S. official traveling with
Vance insisted that the future of Egyp-
tian-Israeli peace talks was not "dead"
and told American reporters: "It's ob-
vious we've hit a bump in the road."
SADAT SAID he opposes any im-
mediate resumption of the Jerusalem
negotiations, which collapsed after two
days Wednesday when Egypt recalled
its foreign minister in an abrupt, sur-
prise move.
"There should be in this moment a

to revive talks

whole re-evaluation. Let's try to find
the proper approach again," said the
Egyptian leader, who will address his
Parliament today in what U.S. officials
said they expect to be a "tough
speech."
Egyptian sources here indicated
Sadat may call for a three-way summit
in Washington with President Carter
and Begin. But Carter told White House
reporters he knew of no such meeting,
and a senior U.S. official traveling with
Vance said the idea was never men-
tioned in the meeting with Sadat.
THERE ALSO WAS speculation that
Sadat, noted for his shock approach to
diplomacy, may offer his resignation in
view of the severe setbacks to his peace
initiative. After his historic visit to
Jerusalem on Nov. 19-21, Sadat said he
would resign if his peace effort proved a
failure.
Asked about it yesterday, he broke in-
to laughter and retorted: "Wait until
you hear my speech."
After having lunch with Sadat, Vance
flew to Ankara, Turkey, to turn his at-
tention to U.S.-Turkish relations and
the troublesome Cyprus issue in talks
with Premier Bulent Ecevit on Friday
night. The secretary plans to return to

HOUSING DIVISION
RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS
FOR 1978-79 ACADEMIC YEAR
Available Starting January 16, 1978
In Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB
POSITIONS INCLUDE: Head Resident, Resident Director,
Assistant Resident Director, Resident
Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident
Fellow, CULS Counselor and Graduate
Student Teaching Assistant
Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by
the end of the 1978 Winter term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College,
Resident Advisor and CULS Counselor positions: Graduate status for Graduate
Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, Head Resident
and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants
may be considered for the Resident Director positions.
QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during
the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end
of the 1978 Winter term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence
halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5
cumulative grade point average and graduate applicants must be in good academic standing
at'the end of the 1977 Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Prefer)
ence is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do

Washington on Sunday after a stop in
Greece.
THE ONLY concrete agreement that
emerged from the Vance-Sadat en-
counter was that the United'States and
Egypt will keep "in close contact" on
future Mideast developments. Sadat
also reaffirmed he would permit
resumption of Egyptian-Israeli mili-
tary negotiations in Cairo on Israeli
withdrawal from the occupied Sinai
Peninsula.
Israel has not yet decided whether to
resume the military talks, which are
less important than the political talks in
Jerusalem. The Israeli cabinet is to
make a decision at a meeting Sunday.
In other developments yesterday, Ku-
wait announced plans to launch a joint
campaign with Saudi Arabia to recon-
cile Sadat with Arab hard-liners op-
posed to his recent peace overtures
with Israel. The two conservative oil-
rich nations have tried to remain neu-
tral in the dispute.I
PRO-LIBYAN PRESS reports frpm
Beirut quoted Libyan leader Col.
Moammar Khadafy as saying Sadat.
has a secret plan to attack Israel and
that Libya would be willing to supply
Egypt with hundreds of tanks for such
an effort. But Western observers in
Beirut said the claim may have been
another in Libya's attempts to sow dis-
trust between Jerusalem and Cairo.
The Palestinian issue has proved to
be the major stumbling block in the
Egyptian-Israeli negotiations. Israel
has proposed "self-rule" for the 1.1
million Palestinians living on the occu-
pied West Bank of the Jordan River and
Gaza Strip, but under a continued Is
raeli military presence. Egypt de-
mands self-determination for the Pales-
tinians and complete Israeli with-
drawal from the occupied territories.
Sadat criticized Israel anew yester
day for wanting to maintain more than
20 Jewish settlements on the eastern.
rim of the Sinai Peninsula. He said
Dayan's insistence on "mutual con-
cessions" by both Egypt and Israel ob-
viously does not apply to the Sinai.
Publicity Seminar
for
Student Organizations
An introduction to the fundamen-
tals of Publicity, covering a broad
range of topics.

SALI
Large Assortment of/Down & Fiberfll
COA TS
-o ~-In Men's
and Women's
Sizes
*Y * /
J f // f/

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan