-Saturday, October 1, 1977-The Michigan Daily Church Worship Services Weather service to move here, but forecasts will not improve UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave.-663-5560 Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor I Sunday Services at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 am. Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10:00 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Services and Sunday School S1: 30 a. m. i ednesday Testimony Meeting-8:00 Child Care Sunday-under 2 years. M$.idweek Informal Worship. Leading Room-306 E. Liberty, 10-5 l1onday-Saturday; closed Sundays. IVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at the Ann Arbor Y, 530 S. Fifth g David Graf, Minister Students Welcome. For information or transportation: 663-3233 or 426-3808. 10: 00 a. m,-Sunday Worship. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Student Foundation). 218 N. Division 665-0606 Chaplain: Rev. Andrew Foster Sunday Eucharist at noon. - UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-l11:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. 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 a 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- g ads and grad students. Get that pefegtword off thetipofyour -~tongue... and put itonpaper iwhere it lbelonigs. :** . 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. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister 608 E. William, corner of State Worship Service-10:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship-l0 a.m. First Baptist Church. Bible Study-11 a.m.. Fellowship Meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.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.-Undergraduate Fellow- ship and Supper. 3:30 p.m.-Bonhoffer Seminar. * * * AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER j502 E. Huron--663-9376 Ronald E. Cary, Minister Worship- a.m.; Bible School-n a. m. CAMPUS CHAPEL-A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reormed Church 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 10 a.m.-Service of Holy Communion -"Give Us Bread NOW." 6 p.m.-Evening Worship. Midweek Warship-12:10 p.m. and 10.p.m. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) ~31Thomson--663-0557 Weekend Masses: Saturday-5 p.m. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5p.m. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship--11:00 a.m. Bible Study-"Revelation"--9.30'. a.m. Fellowship Supper-6:00 p.m.-(Pot- luck. No charge but bring a dish to share). Program-7:00 p.m. - "Hunger in Ann Arbor." By DAN OBERDORFER The Michigan branch of the National Weather Service, accustomed to scan- ning the heavens from a cramped little office at Detroit's Metro Airport, will move into the spacious new Federal Building in Ann Arbor on October 30. But that doesn't mean different weather, or even different forecasts, according to meteorologist C.R. Snider, spokesperson for the bureau. Four Tmore indicted on1 narcotics charges "THERE WILL BE no improvement in weather service for Ann Arbor," Sni- der said. "Externally, public service will remain the same." Currently the only weather information readily avail- able to local residents is a recorded telephone forecast sponsored by a local bank. One change which will be made in November is the addition of ten-day forecasts. Like the three-to-five-day forecast, the ten-day forecast is ac- By M. EILEENIDALEY Four more persons have been indic- ted in the string of drug-related arrests launched by the Washtenaw Area Nar- cotics Team (WANT) Thursday, bringing the number of persons charged to 25. The four men-John Baker, Robert Curry, 15aniel Sander, and Freddie Luckett-were already in police custody when warrants for their arrest were issued by prosecuting attorney William Delhey Thursday. THF-25 ARRESTS are the product of a six-month investigation conducted by WANT, in an effort to round-up area drug dealers. Police were led to the suspects through drug purchases made by WANT undercover officers. According to WANT's Lt. Jim Hen- derson, those arrested were not con- sidered "big time dealers," but most could easily supply a buyer with $1000 to $1500 worth of illegal drugs. Thursday's arrests were a joint effort of WANT, the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department and Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti City Police. In yesterday's raids, police con- fisicated small amounts of heroin, cocaine, speed and marijuana as well as a few firearms. curate only to a point. According to the weather service, the short range temperature forecast is correct to within two degrees, while precipitation forecasts are right about B5 to 90 percent of the time. "THE 24- TO 48-HOUR forecasts seem to be accurate to their natural limit," Snider said. "They haven't im- proved in 20 years. Ann Arbor will also become the' Michigan relay station for the national weather network, synthesizing data col- lected at Metro and. the other eight regional offices. The predictions are then sent along a weather wire andF picked up by major newspapers and weather forecasters throughout the country. Affected/ by the move are 22 fore- casters now based at theaairport and three from Lansing. Several have already relocated in Ann Arbor. The move has been planned since last spring when the General Services Ad- ministration gave its approval. The Michigan branch has been look- ing for a new location since its creation in 1968. "Every forecaster is convinced that his region is the most difficult," Snider says. "But winds off the Great Lakes make Michigan exceptionally diffi- cult." hicago 7 Kenworthy hits sloppy defendant investment supervision joins fed l (continued from Page 1) The Controller's office initiated a transaction with Merrill Lynch on, June 30, in which the money the city had invested in the arbitrage was returned in full. The city then reinvested the money the very next day in another arbitrage transaction.' IN CITY Administrator Sylvester Murray's report on the unauthorized transaction of September 21, Murray, said the effect of the June 30 transaction was "to misrepresent the city's financial condition at the end of its fiscalyear." The city reported a budget surplus of $2.6 iillion at the end of the 1976-77, fiscal year. Without the Controller's office "attempt to cover up the city's losses, the budget surplus would have been cut in half. Kenworthy's report also asks why the proper officials in city govern- ment were not informed of the unauthorized losing transactions un- til September 13. KENWORTHY points to an April 27, 1977 memo that was a change of policy "unauthorized by the Adminis- tratbr or Council. "He also ques- tions the propriety of the city's speculation of tax revenue without the knowledge of the city's citizens. 'The use of city money in arbit rage was in no way an investment, for the city was not purchasing a fixed asset, not assuring itself of any expected rate of return," the state- ment reads. "The public expects the city to prudently invest any short term cash surpluses to insure a rate of return without risking the prin- ciple. Nobody working for the city has the right to speculate with public funds at any time." Murray is still investigating the possibility of disciplining city offi- cials because of the unauthorized investments and the cover up. Mur- ray said he is still trying to discern "who knew-what when." - The state Treasurer's Office is looking into the transaction to see if the city violated, state law. An employe of the office earlier this week categorized the transactions as "questionable."' The state's investi- gation is currently at a standstill, waiting for an audit of the transac- tions being conducted by the account- ing firm of Icerman, Johnson, and Hoffman. The audit should be com- pleted early next week. payroll WASHINTON (AP)-John Froines, a defendant in the Chicago Seven antiwar conspiracy trial of the 1960s, has joined the Carter administration as a $36,000-a- year bureaucrat with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The Labor Department agency an- nounced the appointment yesterday in a routine news release, describing Froines' expertise in chemistry, in- dustrial hygiene and toxic substances. No mention was made of the trial,.at which Froines was acquitted. FROINES, NOW 38, was a welli known activist in the civil rights and" antiwar movements before moving into academia and, more recently, the public health field. A chemist with a doctorate from Yale University, he came to OSHA from Vermont, where he was the state's oc- cupational health director for the past three years. "Some people say we in the movement have lost and given up .. but "I haven't changed," Froines said. Put punch into your prose and sparkle into your speech the easy way-with the new Doubleday Roget's Thesaurus. With its more than 250,000 synonyms and antonyms arranged in dictionary form, our Thesaurus is a veritable treasure-house of powerful words with which you can enhance both your writing and your conversation. No matter who you are or what you do, you know you could be communicating more effectively. Your words are waiting in the new Doubleday Roget's Thesaurus. $4.95 regular, $6.95 thumb-indexed. Available at all booksellers. Where words have more meaning. Join The Daily Staff 'U' profs spar over merits of Bakke case x_._ WHEN DO MUSIC MAJORS SAY BUDWEISER? (Continued from Page I "This issue before us is not affir- mative action. The issue is whether we may appropriately, institutionally, give preference by race." Cohen cited the "equal rights" clause of the fourteenth Amendment as legal basis for his argument. Sandelow, professor in the Law School and author of the brief filed by the Association of American Law Schools in behalf of the University of California, largely based his argument on the historical inequities in American race relations. He challenged Cohen's legal interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment and quoted a mountain of statistics indicating that if not for special admissions programs, minority representation in graduate schools and professions would be negligible. CLOSING HIS first round remarks, Sandelow assailed Cohen. "Professor Cohen's philosophy is a philosophy of a society without a past, but that is not the society in which we live." After each party had a chance for a brief rebuttal, the debate was opened up to audience for questions. The majority of the questioners, both black and white, addressed themselves, to Cohen's argument, and many of them angrily attacked his positions Cohen, not always dispassionate, managed to parry most of thequeries;, as did Sandelow. ~- 4 :-- .4 " ,. .;s, jt "Stimulating... *spssi~ne '", lucid and exciting." -Norman _ 4 ..MMailer x'Ilt 'C% rN y ::.4J