Page 2-Saturday, Janury 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily Church Worship Services Carter's USSR-Africa remarks anger Soviets 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. ChurchSchool at9:00 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 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-10 p.m. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. North Campus-9:30 a.m. 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.-Film; "King: Mont- gomery to Memphis." 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 11:00 a.m. Sunday Bible Study: "Historical Jesus/Risen Lord"-9:30 a.m. Monday Bible Study: "Women in the Bible"-8:00 p.m. Tuesday Bible Study: "History of the Bible"-7:30 p.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. * * * UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 10 a.m.-Morning Service. 5 p.m.-Informal Worship. ANew Copying Center lowest prices in the area MOST COPIES ONLY 3C FINE QUALITY FAST SERVICE RACKHAM COPIES Canticore Bookshop 1229 S. University 665-2604 8 am-10 pm 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.-668-7$21 Rev. Don Postema, Pastor Sunday Services at 10a.m., 6p.m. Coffee hour- 1:15 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-10a.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. 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. MOSCOW (AP) - President Car- ter came under sharp attack in the Moscow press yesterday, accused of having "deliberately distorted" the facts surrounding Soviet military aid to Ethiopia's Marxist government. Tass commentator Yuri Kornilov. expressed particular anger that Car- ter made his remarks "at the level of a head of state" in light of recent U.S.-Soviet moves toward reaching a strategic arms limitation treaty. KORNILOV SAID Carter was seek- ing "to shift the responsibility for the creation of a new seat of tension in Africa to the Soviet Union" and that "such attempts can hardly be as- sessed otherwise than as a deliberate distortion of the true state of affairs with a view to casting a slur on the position of the U.S.S.R." It was the sharpest verbal attack on Carter in the months following initial Soviet outrage over the U.S. President's human rights campaign. Lately the Soviet press has been Investigators begin. Park interrogation SEOUL, South Korea (AP)-Ameri- can and Korean investigators began questioning Korean'lobbyist Tongsun .Park yesterday about his part in a Washington payoff scandal. After months of negotiations between Washington and Seoul, the 42-year-old rice dealer signed an agreement Wed- nesday to tell U.S. Justice Department officials and American courts everything he knows about the alleged influence-buying scheme. THE FREE-SPENDING bachelor is accused of trying, as a foreign gover- nment agent, to win support for South Korea in Washington with cash, gifts and other favors. About 20 former and present U.S. congressmen have acknowledged that they received money or other gifts from Park, but they have denied any wrongdoing. He has been indicted by a federal grand jury on 36 counts of bribery, mail fraud and other charges. Park, accompanied by his American lawyer, William Hundley, arrived at the federal prosecutor's office in down- town Seoul shortly before 10 a.m. He was met by scores of foreign and Korean reporters and photographers. NEITHER PARK nor Hundley made any comments as they moved through the crowd of reporters and into the building. Park was taken to a courtroom across the hall from the interrogation room and administered both Korean and American oaths. The group then moved into the investigation room and the doors were closed. Park signed a memorandum pledging to divulge the full truth about his dealings with the past and current members of' the U.S. Congress. The document pledges Park to answer the questions of U.S. investigators in Seoul and, if required, in American courts in return for full immunity from pending criminal charges against him. American officials told reporters Thursday Park would be questioned first by Korean investigators and that U.S. Deputy Attorney General Ben- jamin Oiviletti and his group then would take over until they obtain the in- formation they needed. A lie detector will be used, American officials said. accenting Carter's pro-detente state- ments. Carter told a Washington news conference Thursday the Soviet Un- ion is sending arms and personnel to help Ethiopia fight off ethnic Somalis battling for control of Ethiopia's Ogaden desert in the Horn of Africa, the land mass that juts into the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean from East Africa. The rebels want to join the region to neighboring Somalia. * WHILE THE United States has avoided interjecting itself into the seven-month-old war, Carter said, "the Soviets have done just the oppo- site." He called for a U.N. Security Council meeting on the issue, a move that could result in a direct U.S.- Soviet face-off. The Tass commentator, while claiming Carter had a "total disre- gard for the facts," did not directly deny that the Soviet Union has helped Ethiopia in some ways. Tass report- ed in another dispatch yesterday that Ethiopian leader Mengistu Haile Mariam had expressed "sincere gratitude to the countries of the socialist community for all-round aid to the Ethiopian revolution." The State Department has estimat- ed the Soviet Union and Cuba together have supplied Ethiopia with as many as 3.000 men now fighting in the Ogaden region, vast portions of which are already under rebel con- trol. KORNILOV called Carter's claim that the Soviet Union was dispatch- ing Cuban soldiers into the Ogaden "absurd and absolutely irrelevant". and the commentator contended that Cuba sets its own foreign policy. Last November, Somalia expelled Soviet advisers and Cuban personnel, accusing both countries of escalating the Ogaden conflict by openly aiding Ethiopia. Kornilov claimed the Unit- ed States has been aiding Somalia militarily, despite U:S. disclaimers, and cited Western press reports that Somalia has received U.S. arms through Saudi Arabia. - --- GET MOVING, AMERICA! Try Daily Classifieds do'l I Look for: The GerbilMgaine ON SALE NOW in the Fishbowl and Campus-Area Stores tCOPY Sr (Continued from Page 1) say said. "It's a losing proposition. "I know one professor who just won't publish anymore. He says he could make more money raking leaves." Forbes said the reasoning behind- course packs is merely to facilitate the exchange of ideas and to get students he never reads anything he copies for two reasons: time and confidentiality. "ACTUALLY, I don't know if I'm liable or not when a customer brings in something illegal," DeBoer said, "but my personal feeling is that it's the cus- tomer's responsibility." The 1978 Michiganensian (U-M's yearbook) is looking for students interested in working on the business staff. Positions are open in marketing, sales, and general business. No experience necessary, we will train you. tops in trouble? O The DAILY'S PHONE NUMBERS: Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News & Happenings 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 "You bet they're (copy shop owners) liable too. They'd like to have it that way, but they can't put their heads in the sand." -James Stephenson, Ann Arbor attorney place articles in journals don't do so for profit. "They do it for recognition," he said. "And generally you're talking about 25 students per class, which is not a very large number, so it's not going to affect the market." STILL, SOME copiers are worried. Bill Slack, owner of the new Dollar Bill Copying on South University, said he has a regular copier in addition to his large one because the larger machine won't do books. Does that mean he's still making multiple copies from books? "Well ... I'm not going to answer that," he said. Slack said he doesn't know if he is liable for what he prints, since there haven't been any test cases yet, but, like Forbes, he is concerned with the possible implications of the new law. "What I think it could do is prevent a lot of people from coming in to make copies," he said. At Albert's, the new law has caused few ripples so far. With two shops, 50 employees, and 13 machines, Albert's produces a "base figure" of about one million copies per month, according to Forbes. "I would characterize business as being 'go'od to excellent'," he said. out of the library. "THERE'S NO intention to destroy the market for an author," he said. "Most of our professors are authors, so we can't afford to disregard au- thors," he explained. "Most of the pro- fessors appreciate our position. Forbes said some professors, concerned by "scandal stuff that's been written about the new law," had discussed the prob- lem with him. Thecopy shops are on shakier legal ground when it comes to non-classroom materials, which are not exempted from the new law. Dave DeBoer, owner of Copy Quick on South University, said James Stephenson, an Ann Arbor at- torney specializing in copyrights and patents, emphatically disagreed. "You bet they're liable too," he said of thecopy shops. "They'd like to have it that way, but they can't put their heads in the sand. "THOSE COPY machines give peo- ple a real weapon, and they've been using it indiscriminately. They'd better get with it and start reading what they print," Stephenson said. Moreover, he added, systematic duplication is not covered by "fair use." Forbes contended that scientists who 'L' ^ . t If interested- Call 764-0561, or come to our offices at 420 Maynard (Next to SAB) Med schools set for insurance aid (Continued from Page 1) surance for its physicians, "because it (the school) doesn't have its own facili- ty." BECAUSE THE amount of money required in each of the school's reserve HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF JOB OPENINGS FOR 1978-79 INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS MONDAY, JANUARY 16-WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1978 WEST QUAD-January 16, Monday, 7:00 P.M.-Dining Room No. 1 OXFORD-January 16, Monday, 7:00 P.M.-Seeley Lounge BARBOUR-NEWBERRY-January 16, Monday, 8:00 P.M.-Barbour Living Room ALICE LLOYD-January 17, Tuesday, 7:00 P.M.-Pilot Office COUZENS-January 17, Tuesday, 7:00 P.M.-Living Room STOCKWELL-January 17, Tuesday,;5:00 P.M.-Main Lounge EAST QUAD-January 16, Wednesday, 6:30 P.M.-Room 126 W mof t- .u a fftie I R$dr$nand Ashram is now offering Beginning courss in meditation & Kundalini Yoga BEGINNING CLASSES every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday at 5:30 FULL CLASS at 6:30 995-5483 I funds is based on past suits, Wiener said he is not sure what effect the law will have on WSU. "It should be possi- ble for us to provide a pool mechanism. Whether it will be more or less (expen- sive), no one can tell." But Wiener feels the implementation of the new system could help the school in other ways. "I've gone over the content of the bill, and it is going to be quite a help to us. I think it's going to be a major improve- ment in our ability to recruit people into a medical school environment." Each of the schools, if they are to par- ticipate in the new system, must submit an official estimate of this year's losses to the governor. None of the schools have arrived at an official figure yet. The National Safety Council, based in Chicago, is a nongovernmental, non- profit, public service organization dedicated to safety education and the development and . implementation of accident prevention programs reaching every segment of American life. Hey Baby... going my way? find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds ,under Transportation. "Free Speech for-Those We Despise Most" A talk by aUwa I