Page 2--Saturday, November 19, 1977-The Michigan Daily " ChurchWjrs" h ervices Shenanigans before the game -"-- Blue blasts 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 stude'nts. * * '* UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division Steve Bringardner, Pastor Church School-9: 45 a.rm. Morning Worship-l1:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 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.; u Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Need transportation? Call 662-9928. * * * \ ,MERICAN BAPTIST wfAMPUS CENTER AND sFIRST BAPTIST CHURCH k_302 E. Huron-663-9376 a. Carroll Arnold, Minister '11o ald E. Cary, Minister orship-10 a.m.; Bible Study-11 ~4m. Fellowship Meeting-Wednesday at :45 p.m. .. , . r* 1 * C! W C r . .r F' t "C V . x. A Public Servce of ths rewspaper&eTh eAdvrt snCouncil We're COUntlng a O you. Red Cross. The Good Neighbor. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Student Foundation) 218 N. Division 665-0606 Chaplain: Rev. Andrew Foster Sunday Eucharist at noon. * * * 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 5 p.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. * * * FIRST CHIURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Services and Sunday School -10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meeting-8:00 p.m. Child Care Sundav-inder 2 vr: Christian Scientist Reading Room- 1 206 E. Liberty, 10-5 Monday-Saturday; closed Sundays. 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. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCII 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 662-4466 Sunday: :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.-Bonhoffer Sem- inar. 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. CAMP US CHAPEL-A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church 1236 Washtenaw Ct.-668-7421 Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 10:00 a.m.-"If There Wasn't a Hell, Would You Believe in God?" 6:00 p.m.-Evening Celebration. * * * LORD OF LIG HIT 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: "Revelation"- 9:30 a.m. Sunday Fellowship Supper-6:00 p.m. ($1.25). Program-7:00 p.m.-Topic: Discus- sion of the film "Oh God." Monday Bible Study: "The First Prophets"-7:30 p.m. Kosher Kitchen at 715 HILL ST. WILL BE OPEN Saturday night S at6:30-12:30 P.M. I I I Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Dancingona The targets for the pie-throwing contest never showed up and the "mystery guest" remained a mystery, but contestants in the first American Dia- betes Association (ADA) dance marathon were still enjoying themselves last night as the 30-hour boogie shimmied into its final hours in the Union Ballroom. Six couples in all dragged their heels around the floor, with couple #1, Mike Quinn and Laurie Fletch- er, bowingbout after 20 hours to attend a wedding. Terr Lamb of couple #5 was the next to hit the deck, as she suffered shin-splints and had to leave the floor, Herhpartner, Daniel Niemczak, tangoed three hours on his own before a series of ladies from the ADA agreed to accompany him. ONE COUPLE, Janice Falk and Martin Ebel, joined the fray three hours late, but agreed to dance through the allotted breaks - half hours every three hours - to make up the difference. In all they danced 14 straight hours before sitting down for the first time. Dancing was not the only activity in the ballroom. Jamie Weiss and Nancy Dunitz donated their lips to the cause, operating a kissing wheel which offered a random choice of "A peck, a toe curler, a buss, or a smooch,"all for 50Q. "We get to put our own definitions on all thesE words," Dunitz said, "so a smooch, a bus, a toe1 curler, and a peck are all the same thing." Other activities included balloon shaving and bubble blowing, and among the 160 prizes were tickets to this afternoon's Buckeye Waltz. - ELEONORA di LISCIA Buckeyes in brain battle Woody and Bo both missed it. Although most people outside of Briarwood Mall yesterday prob- ably missed it, too, the excitement, action and tumult of the annual interstate clash of titans has already taken place. And the Maize and Blue shone through. In what was billed as the grand playoff for the "National Intercollegiate MasterMind Tourna- ment," two University gamers narrowly defeated a pair of Buckeye opponents in a tense MasterMind match. INVENTED BY an Israeli postal worker less than a decade ago, MasterMind has since become one of the world's best selling games, boasting 25 million players worldwide. The object of the game is to set a combination of four pegs-each peg is a different color-in a pat- tern behind a screen. The opponent then tries to deduce the color and location of the pegs in as few guesses as possible. "To play in the tournament is an ego trip," said Dan McFadden of Invicta Corporation, the company which markets the game. "The winner of the tour- nament-the individual who racks up the lowest score-goes to the nationals in New York. "The Big Ten has a good chance to win the world championship this year ... it really has been inten- se today. These students are really getting it on." THE PERSON with the lowest (that is, best) overall score was University graduate math student Tony Audas. Computers playing the game averaged between 4.1 and 4.2 estimates per round; Audas never scored above 5.0 in nine rounds. "I programmed a programmable calculator to play MasterMind against me," he explained. "You don't have to worry about a calculator getting bored." Audas said he is looking forward to going to the nationals the day after Thanksgiving, because he will once again be competing against computers.. Instead of human competitors, the machines will be programmed to supply the peg combinations to be deciphered. THE TOURNAMENT was one of 16 sponsored across the country by Invicta, all involving bitter college rivals like Michigan and Ohio State. One person summed up the Wolverine sentiment prevalent among the onlookers. He said: "It's been close. It's really been a lot like a foot- ball game, but just like tomorrow, I think Michigan will come out on top." Oh yes, and the final score? In a fiercely fought, come-from-behind victory, our team reigned vic- torious, 98 to 100. Take that, Buckeyes! -R. J. SMITH Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Woody eged on The Fat Man came up with egg on his face yesterday as about 300 spectators gathered on the Diag to watch a group of Maize and Blue amateur inventors demonstrate devices constructed "to hurl grade-A large eggs at the biggest dummy of them all." "The biggest dummy" was a life-size effigy of Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes, and the contraptions turned out to be an assortment of flingers, pitchers and shooters that looked like one .of Rube Goldberg's bad dreams. A CROWD pleaser was graduate studenT Steven Rocklin's rocket powered egg thrower. In Rocklin's creation, the egg is placed in the nose cone of the rocket, a method which Rocklin's roommate Mark Krauss claimed could enable the egg-chucker to hit a target at 200 feet. Attempting to prove that complexity isn't always the best answer, John Majkowski built a large slingshot. "We clocked the egg at 120 miles per hour," said Majkowski, who won a similar contest two years ago by nailing a Woody effigy with a water balloon. NOT ALL THE devices had blueprints. Lee Ben- son and Bill Powers decided to enter the contest Thursday night. "We're kind of tired," Powers said. "We started working at 11 p.m. and finished at 4 a.m." In the end it was Jim Logan, a senior in mechanical engineering, who had the best yolk on Woody by capturing first prize. But for most of the fans, it was only a prelude to the egg-citement this afternoon. -Beth Rosenberg ......,... .._.. _.,..M.. w.. .,... . ... ...u._.. . . .. ..m.. . ...,...x,. .. .. . .k.W.. . .,.. . ... ._.....r..,..a., .. ..._.._w .,........z.., Bukovsky tells of Soviet terror (Continued from Page 1) T * o you et er.Bcaseyo semax m n.s you naoy keein afi od funeandhey'r ese. o u, don't (lte osurerioso you, ned rerihtinth ca ge.) eitr. nease ouusTampax tampons.aeuiul eind You donjtoy eepitncfing ' to expand so they conform to individual body contours. Which means there's far less chance No wonder you'd never con- But,-ms - imprtantTmp- Arrested in 1967 and again in 1972, Bukovsky said his fight for freedom was always his "crime". THE PRISONER of conscience told receptive listeners yesterday that President Carter's human rights campaign has been a tremendous boost for the dissident movement. Carter's diplomacy has promoted the treatment of dissidents to "another level of discussion," he said. "Before, junior authorities could make arbitrary decisions. Now, when it is connected with the relations between two countries, any decision must be taken to higher levels - the Politburo and the KGB." Estimating there are about 20,000 political prisoners - officially classi- fied as "dangerous state criminals" - Bukovsky hastened to add that the Soviet Union's population of 250 million is not much better off. "THE ENTIRE, population of the country is in a state of terror and fear," he said. "The 'silent majority' is frightened to speak openly but have the same opinion as we (dissi- dents) have." But the dissident was skeptical over whether American audiences, "who take freedom for granted,'' could really understand this sort of fear. "It's very difficult to under- stand, unless you don't have it (free- dom). Once you're deprived of it, you start to suffocate," he explained. At yesterday morning's press con- ference, Bukovsky criticized West- ern trade policy toward the Soviets. The West undermined the position of intellectuals and scientists, who wanted internal reforms for the liberalization of technology, he said. '"As an alternative, the party ap- paratus proposed to get technology with the Western sidde, and there- fore, avoiding the necessity of mak- ing reforms inside the country," he said. "Westerners were stupid enough to grant it, extend trade and make available to them modern tech- nology." MSA ballots recounted (Continued from Page 1) the college. Such representatives would then comprise the entire Assembly. Had the amendment not passed, MSA would have abided by a consti- tutional provision that calls for abolition of all seats from the Assem- bly held by appointed representa- tives. THE AMENDMENT passed Thursday calls for an extension of the terms of present appointed represen- tatives. Since Gibson is a School of Library Science appointed represen- tative, he is virtually assured of a continuation of his appointed seat, and thus wished to withdraw from the running for the elected seats. The other JOB party candidate, Thomas Danko, finished tenth in the balloting after receiving many of Gibson's transferred votes. The vote redistribution is allowed under the I 1 FALAFIL SPECIAL: FREE french fries with falifil. I I I preferential voting system used by MSA. "He wouldn't have won if I hadn't withdrawn," Gibson had said Thursday night. Danko lost his seat in the recount. "I called up (Election Director) Monte Fowler Tuesday night and told him that if the amendment passed I might wish to withdraw from the race," said Gibson. "He (Fowler) told me it would be okay." "I DID tell him that it would be okay," Fowler said last night. "Last year a person also dropped during the counting." According to Fowler, last night's recount results will be submitted to the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) as the "correct results" for certifica- tion. CSJ certifies all such elections. Any challenges to the results will be heard at the certification hearing, tentatively scheduled for Monday night. Senior Eric Arnson, in the results tabulated Thursday night, accumu- lated the most first-choice votes (320) of any MSA candidate in recent years. Arnson compiled almost three times the number of votes of his nearest competitor. Less than 2,000 students voted in the election open to all University students. ARNSON attributed his success to a coordinated campaign organization and acceptance of his ideas by a wide range of voters. Lots of p e4jt (Continued from Pace 1 asshole. At least Bo hasn't taken down side line markers." The crowd cheered wildly as a skewered Buckeye dummy became engulfed in the bonfire flames. "Burn Woody!" they chanted. However, one muffled voice mumbled, "How sadis- tic." RATHER THAN avoid flying sparks from the bonfire, the fans casually brushed away the cinders and maintained their positions to hear speakers Bo Schembechler and Bob Ufer, among others. The crowd hushed as Bo took the microphone and praised his gridders. "This is the greatest single football game played in America," he shout- ed. "And every Michigan man and woman is here to win!" The crowd responded with gushes of "We're gonna win - we're really gonna win!" and "Go Blue!" RADIO announcer Ufer further in- cited the mob with a frenzied tally of championship holdings, "This is the right kind of Meechigan spirit," the Voice bellowed. Sounding much like the emotional Ufer himself, Paul Edwards of Detroit panted, "Bob Ufer is fantas- tic and he tells you everything like where you stand in the game and we have a sign in Section 39 that says Meechigan. You tell him that." Onlookers weren't the only Wol- verine fans attending the spirited rally. Athletic Supporter Limited, the originators of the Michigan "digit" t-shirt, set up business on a parked car. "For the more conservative, we have a thumbs down for Ohio State," said owner Sandy Berris. FANS PERCHED in trees peered over the "Screw the Buckeyes" stand, where loyal fans could pur- chase an authentic buckeye pierced with a screw. L ""-"-""""-"""- -"""" The University of Michigan Housing Division and LS&A PILOT PROGRAM/ALICE LLOYD HALL POSITION OPENING: Resident Advisor-Alice Lloyd Hall (UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN'S CORRIDOR) Margot Morrow, Building Director for Pilot Program/Alice Lloyd Hall has announced a Resident Advisor position opening on a women's corridor for the Winter Term 1978. Candidates must be enrolled in a graduate degree program. Preference will be given to those who, in addition to corridor advising, are also able to teach a credit mini-course in the Winter Semester and/or can co-direct a new Pilot Program field placement project. Full details are available from the Pilot Program Office, Alice Lloyd Hall, 100 Observatory St., 764-7521. Margot and the nominating committee will review the applications and resumes and will contact individuals whose background and experience coincides with the position open to arrange an interview time. REMUNERATION: 100% room and board plus a $200.00 stipend for the academic responsibilities. SUNDAY I WEDNESDAY I I music by I Wild Bill ISub Day 7:30 p.m. I $1.29 I ""-"-------"--"'---------"-------- ---"----- ----------- --- --- -- DMONDAY I THURSDAY I DOLLAR DAYSI Piz e cGreSubNite 1 i