Page 2-Saturday, January 7, 1978-The Michigan Daily Church Worship Services Mnnnnnnrm- 1 nnnnnnnnnnnnnnmMrm_- 1 mM r M- mm r, r,,nrm r --I Dollar slips on market ; Fed acts to snap trend LONDON (AP) - The dollar edged Wednesday. Later, in after-hours ruling body, told'a news confere )wnward on the world's money trading, the pound jumped further to Carter did not try to predict the fut arkets yesterday as President Carter $1.93. course of the U.S. currency. sured European leaders the currency " Tokyo: 240.82 Japanese yen, down As the dollar declined in 1977, so basically sound. from 241.20. It was 237.0 Wednesday. foreign officials sus ected that FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 662-4466 Sunday: 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship. 12:00-Coffee Hour. 4:00 p.m.-Undergraduate Fellow- ship and Supper. Tuesday-3:30 p.m.-Seminar: Reli- gious Experiences. .* * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (the campus ministry of the ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship at 11:00a.m. Tuesday Bible Study: "History of the Bible"-7:30 p.m. Thursday evening Bible study on North Campus. Peace Corps i s alive and Vwll and waiting All your life you've wanted to do something im- portant for the world. Now a lot of the world needs you to do it. We need volunteers with skills and all kinds of practical knowledge. Call toll free:- 800-424-8580. P a corps 0 A Public Service of This Newspaper & The Advertising Council 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 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 9:15 a.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 * * * 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. * * * 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. 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. * * * 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 9:00and 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 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. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 10 a.m.-Morning Service. 5 p.m.-Informal Worship. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekend Masses: Saturday-10 p.m. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a. m., noon, and 5p.m: North Campus-9: 30a.m. '* * * FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Services and Sunday School -10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meeting-8:00 p.m. Child Care Sunday-under 2 years. Christian Science Reading Room- 206 E. Liberty, 10-5 Monday-Saturday; closed Sundays. do me as is nce ure me the Despite its modest losses, the dollar held on to most of the gains it made Thursday after U.S. action to snap the currency out of its year-long decline. AS THE BUSINESS day ended on this side of the Atlantic and got under way in the United States, dealers in New York said the Federal Reserve Board was not actively intervening on the foreign exchanges yesterday. ' Here are late rates for the dollar in major foreign financial centers, com- pared with late rates Thursday and late rates Wednesday, before the United States said it would buy dollars on the money marts to prop up the U.S. currency: * Frankfurt: 2.1350 German marks yesterday, down from 2.1480 Thursday. It was 2.0730 Wednesday. * Zurich: 2.0050 Swiss francs, down from 2.0437. It was 1.9375 Wednesday. " Milan: 874.30 Italian lire, down from 875.75. It was 861.40 Wednesday. . Paris: 4.7325 francs, down from 4.7575. It was 4.6200 Wednesday. " Amsterdam: 2.2800 Dutch guilders, down from 2.3110. It was 2.2310 Wed- nesday. " London: $1.9112 to the pound, com- pared with $1.8825 Thursday and $1.9590 DEALERS SAID trading was cauti- ous and subdued throughout the day as the money markets' big operators wait- ed to see how far the United States would go to rescue the dollar. The Federal Reserve Board and U.S. Treasury announced Wednesday after the close of Europe's business day that it would intervene on the money markets in coordination with European central banks to support the dollar. That announcement and aggressive purchase of dollars by the Federal Reserve Thursday caused the dollar to make a dramatic comeback on the world's foreign exchanges. Dealers were not encouraged by the Fed's ap- parent absence from the market in New York yesterday morning. "TH E MARKET is testing the central banks' resolve to keep the dollar steady," commented a Frankfurt dealer. In Brussels at the end of a seven- nation tour, Carter emphasized to top European Common Market officials the "underlying strength and resilience" of the dollar. But Roy Jenkins, president of the European Commission, the market's United States was letting it fall to make American exports more competitive in overseas markets and thus help wipe out the U.S. trade deficit. On the London and Zurich gold markets yesterday, the price of the precious metal rose sharply. In Zurich, gold rose $5 a troy ounce to close at $170.125, compared with $165.125 at Thursday's close. In London the metal jumped 3.375 dollars to close at $169.875, compared with $166.50 Thursday. MUSEUM BEQUEST NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The New Orleans Museum of Art has an- nounced the settlement of the estate of Victor K. Kiam and the acceptance of his bequest of 17 paintings and sculptures by eight European and American artists. It says the bequest also includes a collection of 180 African and Oceanic sculptures. E. John Bullard, museum director, said, "The Kiam bequest, added to previous holdings, gives the museum the most important and diverse collection of 20th-century European paintings and African art in the Southeastern United States." Women workers strive 1o upgrade A ND A CHAPT WASHINGTON (AP) - Ever tire of group, which calls getting coffee for the boss, watering his formed a union - L plants or keeping him in a supply of ated with the Servic carrots while he diets? national Union and Some 3,000 women office workers members. who object to such practices have for- "The purpose of med organizations in more than a dozen upgrade jobs held American cities, including Boston, workers," said Kar Cleveland, Chicago, Dayton, New York year-old former cle and San Francisco. neapolis. Try Daily Classifieds off i ER of the Boston itself "9-to-5" has ocal 925. It is affili- e Employees Inter- includes about 300 these groups is to by woman office en Nussbaum, a 27- rk-typist from Min- now director of a orking Women Or- Cleveland which in- e workers on how to ce jobs I, Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan LA IFE ----------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- ml -II I r r - ---m-------CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!-----------JI USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST WORDS 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days addi. 0-10 1.15 2.30 3.05 3.80 4.55 5.30 .75 11-15 1.40 2.80 3.70 4.60 5.50 6.40 .90 Please indicate 16-20 1.65 3.30 4.35 5.40 6.45 7.50 1.05 wherethisad 21-25 1.90 3.80 5.00 6.20 7.40 8.60 1.20 or"n: 26-30 2.15 4.30 5.65 7.00 8.35 9.70 1.35 for sale 31-35 2.40 4.80 6.30 7.80 9.30 10.80 1.50 help wanted roommates 36-40 2.65 5.30 6.95 8.60 10.25 11.90 1.65 personal 41-45 2.90 5.80 7.60 9.40 11.20 13.00 1.80 etc. 46-50 3.15 6.30 8.25 10.20 12.15 14.10 1.95 Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. AA :I ... : fs . Ph a . l , ... Classifieds The Michiaen Daily Drive for lower ine falls short (Continued from Page 1). Whiffletree manager Robert Babcock said he had no special interest in the. prosecution other than as a citizen. He said the spa was delinquent in paying its rent and forced the restaurant management to incur legal costs to ob- tain rent money. THE PRE-TRIAL hearing for the arrested women was slated for Novem- ber 29, but rescheduled for January 10 by order of 15th District Court Judge Peter Thomassen. The delay was requested by the defense counsel. The raid on the massage parlors also sparked the organization of another group, the Women's Legal Defense Committee, which is attempting to raise money for the massage parlor workers' legal defense. A 17-year-old Belleville woman was also arrested Thursday night in the 100 block of South Fourth Avenue on prostitution charges. According to Ann Arbor police, the woman entered an unmarked patrol car and struck a $50 bargain with the officer inside. He then arrested her on charges of accosting and soliciting. THE ORGANIZATION'S $25,000 an- nual budget comes almost entirely from donations from small foundations, church groups, raffles and bake sales, she said. Within the past year, Ms. Nussbaum said, she had helped organize groups in Brattleboro, Vt., Concord, N.J., Har- tford and New Haven, Conn., Provi- dence, R.I., and Detroit. For a membership fee of $5 to $15, de- pending on a worker's salary, members receive legal aid and assistance in pres- suring employers to change unaccep- table practices, Ms. Nussbaum said. "ALSO, THEY GET support from an organization which will make their Ms. Nussbaum is group called the W ganizing Project in1 structs women offico rebel effectively. problems public," she added. Nussbaum said the most frequent complaint is that women office workers are often asked to do work unrelated to their job. She said some of the com- plaints included a Cleveland secretary who said her boss made her take before and after pictures when he shaved off his mustache; a Boston office worker who was fired when she refused to return to a cafeteria to exchange a cor- ned beef sandwich on white for one on rye that her boss had ordered. Nussbaum said another secretary complained that her boss asked her to put mayonnaise on his plants because he heard somewhere that it makes them grow better. She said another woman complained she had to sew up her boss's slacks when he split them. COMPANY management is not usually happy to have its female em- ployees organize, Nussbaum said. "No management wants to share its decision-making," she said. "I guess their reasoning is that 'if people have more say in decisions that affect them, they'll soon demand more money.' There are a handful of men in the organizations' membership of 3,000, Ms. Nussbaum said. "But 80 per cent of the office worker population is female." Salute to Sandburg in birthday trib ute' (Continued from Page 1) U.S. overseas broadcast system. The biography of Lincoln, considered by agency got its name from a Sandburg some critics to be the finest historial poem proclaiming, "I heard the voice biography written in this century. of America singing." Historians, including Sandburg's daughter, Margaret, will present TEN YEARS AFTER the poet's papers today on Sandburg's early years death, people still quote his line: "Some in Galesburg, his wanderings about the day someone will hold a war and no one country and his development as a will come." writer in Wisconsin. Smith also noted that Sandburg wrote Daughter Helga Sandburg Orila will more words on Abraham Lincoln than also perform songs written by her there are in the Bible. He won the Pulit- father or sung in the family home. zer Prize in 1940 for his six-volume The University of Michigan Department of Recreational Sports Hiring Staff for Winter Term Children's Sports-O-Rama POSITION DESCRIPTION: Plan, Organize and Direct physical activity program for children 3-10 years old. - - - Sandburg QUALIFICATIONS: 1) Interest in working with children and children's activities. 2) Physical Education, Sports or Aquatics background prefer- red. th ""p