Page 2-Saturday, December 10, 1977-The Michigan Daily ChurchWorship Serices ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST AMERICAN BAPTIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. Presently Meeting at the Ann Arbor Y, CAMPUS CENTER AND (one block west of U of M Stadium) 530 S. Fifth FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Bible Study-Sunday, 9:30 a.m.; David Graf, Minister 502 E. Huron-63-9376 Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Students Welcome. O. Carroll Arnold, Minister Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and For information or transportation: Ronald E. Cary, Minister 6:00 p.m. 663-3233 or 426-3808. Worship-10 a.m.; Bible Study-11 Need transportation? Call 662-9928. 10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. a.m. * * * * * * Fellowship Meeting-Wednesday at FIRST UNITED METHODIST UNIVERSITY LUHERAN 7:45 p.m. State at Huron and Washington CHAPEL (LCMS) Dr. Donald B. Strobe 1511 Washtenaw Ave.-663-5560 LORD OF LIGHT The Rev. Fred B. Maitland Alfred T. Scheps, Pastor LURAF GHUTC The Rev. E. Jack Lemon Sunday Services at 9:15 and 10:30 LUTHERAN CHURCH Worship Services at 9:00 and 11:00. a.m. (the campus ministry of the ALC-LCA Church School at 9:00 and 11:00. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 a.m. Gordon Ward, Pastor Adult Enrichment at 10:00. Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10:00 801S.Forest at HillSt- WESLEY FOUNDATION p.m. Sunday Worship at 11:00 a.m. UNITED METHODIST * * * Sunday Bible Study: "Revelation"- CAMPUS MINISTRY CAMPUS CHAPEL-A Campus 9:30 a.m. W. Thomas Shomaker, Ministry of the Christian Sunday Supper-6:00 p.m. ($1.25). Chaplain/Director Reformed Church Program-7:00 p.m. (Topic: "World Extensive programming for under- 1236 Washtenaw Ct.-668-7$21 Hunger"). grads and grad students. Rev. Don Postema, Pastor Monday Bible Study: "The First Pro- * * * 10:00 a.m.-"People of Christmas- phets"-7:30p.m. UNIVERSITY CHURCH Joseph." Thursday evening Bible study on OF THE NAZARENE 6 p.m. - Christmas Candlelight North Campus. 409 S. DivisionSevc. * * * Steve Bringardner, Pastor * * * CANTERBURY HOUSE Church School-9:45 a.m. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH (Episcopal Student Foundation) Morning Worship-11:00 a.m. Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister 218 N. Division Evening Worship-6:00 p.m. 608 E. William, corner of State 6:5.0606 * * * Worship Service-10:30 a.m. Chaplain: Rev. Andrew Foster UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH Sunday Morning Worship-10 a.m. Choral Evensong Sunday evenings at 1001 E. Huron * * * 700 p.m. at St. Andrew Episcopal Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, MinistersC7:0 N. ivsi. 10 a.m.-Morning Service. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Church,306N. ivision. 5 p.m.-Informal Worship. SCIENTIST * * * * * * 1833 Washtenaw FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL Sunday Services and Sunday School 1432 Washtenaw Ave. (Catholic) -10:30a.m. 662-4466 331 Thompson-663-0557 Wednesday Testimony Meeting-8:00 Sunday: Weekend Masses: p.m. ':30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship. Saturday-10p.m. Child Care Sunda-under 2 years. 12:00-Coffee Hour. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 Christian Science Reading Room--, 4:00 p.m.-Undergraduate Fellow- a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. 206 E. Liberty, 10-5 Monday-Saturday; ship and Supper. Tueda-3:0 ~m.BohoferSem- North Campus-9:30 a.m. closed Sundays. Tuesday-3:30 p.m.-Bonhoffer . inar. AVIS RENT-A-CAR Join The Daily HOLIDAY SPECIAL ST from WED., DEC. 23rd thru TUES., JAN. 3rd WITH WE CAN INCREASE $15.95 PeryUNLIMITED YOUR LSAT SCORE rom Day MILEAGE Call or Write: University LSAT Preparation Service Inc. 2200 Fuller Rd., Suite 9128 Call for Information and Reservations Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105 ~13-995-4O14 "S-1 OV CAtL ANYTIME If you have Used Books STUDNTSto Sell-- Read This! As the Semester end approaches-bringing with it a period of heavy book selling by students- ULRICH'S would like to review with you their BUY-BACK POLICY. Used books fall into several categories, each of which-because of the law of supply and demand-has its own price tag. Let's explore these various categories for your guidance. CLASS I. CLOTHBOUND A textbook of current copyright-used on our compus-and which the Teaching Department involved has approved for re-use in upcoming semesters-has the highest market value. If ULRICH'S needs copies of this book we will offer a minimum of 50% off the list price for copies in good physical condition. When we have sufficient stock of a title for the coming semester, ULRICH'S will offer a "WHOLESALE PRICE" which will be explained later in this article. (THIS IS ONE REASON FOR SELLING ALL YOUR USED BOOKS AT ONCE!) CLASS II. PAPERBOUND Paperbacks are classified in two groups: A. Text Paperbacks; B. Trade Paperbacks A. Text Paperbacks will be purchased from you as Class I books above. B. Trade Paperbacks would draw an approximate offer of 25% of the list price when in excel- lent condition. CLASS Ill. Some of the above Class I or Class 11 books will be offered which have torn bindings, loose pages, large amounts of highlighting and underlining, or other physical defects. These will be priced down according to the estimated cost of repair or saleability. CLASS IV. Each semester various professors decide to change text for a given course. These decisions on change of textbooks are made in echelons of THINKING AND AUTHORITY for above the level of your local book retailers, AND ULRICH'S HAS NO PART IN THE DECISION. (Quite often we have MANY copies of the old title of which you have only ONE.) However, ULRICH's does enter the picture by having connections with over 600 other book- stores throughout the country. We advertise these discontinued books and sell many of them at schools where they are still being used. ULRICH'S does this as a service to you and pays you the BEST POSSIBLE price when you sell them to us with your currently used books. CLASS V. Authors and publishers frequently bring out new editions. When we "get caught" with an old edition, let's accept the fact that it has no value on the wholesale market, and put it on the' shelf as a reference book or sell it cheap for a bargain reference book. You will find that you come out best In the long run when you sell ALL your books to ULRICH'S. UNESCO slaps South Africa By RENE BECKER DETROIT - The United States Commission for UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) passed a resolution denouncing the govern- ment of South Africa for its denial of human rights of blacks and non- whites here yesterday. The Commission noted the govern- ment obstruction of the educational, scientific and cultural development for blacks. THE COMMISSION resolved to direct the Human Rights Committee to establish a task force to develop a position and' policy recommendation on South Africa. It also believes the recommendations, which will be given to the State Department, will influence U.S. foreign policy. The members of the commission expanded their view of Human Rights in relation to South Africa on the third and final day of their 41st annual meeting at the Renaissance Center. The day was devoted to a symposium on international human rights. The issue of human rights is of particular interest to University Regent Sarah Power, chairperson of the U.S. commission. The Regents are being pressed by social action groups on campus to sell all Univer- sity investments in corporations op- erating in South Africa. POWER SAID the symposium "made me realize how very complex the issue is." She said the Regents must "look at all of the elements involved." Power, aware that an answer to the South African investment issue has been slow in coming, said, "I'm a little concerned that something hasn't been done yet." She said she would raise the issue at the next Regents meeting. But Emmitt Roberts, a member of the Lawyers' Committee (a group concerned with human rights), said Mlliken"insensitive," says Sen. Fitzgerald.'1 (Continued from Page 1) medical embarrassment to the state." "Responding to the marching orders of the Michigan Department of Agricul- ture, every member of which he ap- points, the Farm Bureau was protec- ted," he charged. "This is an outrage- ous indictment of insensitivity." Fitzgerald said he finds fault with Milliken's handling of the tandem tank- er issue and "insensitivities" in the sphere of social services. THE SENATOR also accused the ad- ministration as unable to bring home federal revenue to help the state's floundering budget. "We have an embarrassing return of federal funds from Washington," he said. "We are a high tax-paying state but we rank forty-ninth in the return of tax dollars. We don't have the money to provide dollars for higher education, social services, and public health. "We're always looking at mechan- isms to cut the budget. We're always looking to borrow from cookie jar funds and raising taxes, things that are gen- erally counter-productive to economic development and tax base preserva- tion." Fitzgerald vowed that he could be a more "aggressive pursuer",of federal revenue than Milliken. "IF WE'VE SEEN Governor Milli- ken's performance with a Republican President living possibly 100 miles from Traverse City, what is his performance going to be with a Democratic peanut farmer from Plains?" On other issues, Fitzgerald, chair- person of the Special Senate Committee on Spouse Abuse, said the state must encourage law enforcement agencies and prosecutors to issue warrants and make arrests in domestic abuse cases, and to bring such cases to court. Wife- beating has been brought to public at- tention in Michigan with the two recent acquittals of women who killed their husbands after repeated beatings. "That old opinion that we don't want to get involved, I am afraid, has caused a lot of women in our society to be abused," he said. ALTHOUGH HIS STAND on domes- tic violence will win him points with concerned women, his stand on abor- tion will no doubt alienate some women voters. He's against them, period. On the current drilling in the Pigeon River area and similar questions on the tender balance between ecological con- cerns and the state's employment and energy needs, Fitzgerald said he favors the drilling as long as proper safeguard steps are taken. "I am sensitive to the loss of irretrievable wildlife -areas" he said, 'but if it has been shown coniicusively, as I believe it has in this case, that we tave taken every possible step to .safeguard the area, then the drilling should proceed." activist groups could bypass the Regents. ROBERTS' group is now investi- gating state statutes which forbid institutions, like the University, from investing in corporations which oper- ate in a segregated environment. "I believe that Michigan is one of those states," he said. Thomas Bergenthal, International Law professor at the University of Texas, agreed with Roberts. He added that laws could be made along those lines where they don't already exist. Brian Kuttner, a member of the South African Liberation Committee (SALC), said in a recent interview that his group has also been investi- gating that possibility. He said it was a state law that moved the Univer- sity of Wisconsin to action on their investments. Bergenthal was also interested in the moral. aspects of the issue. "I think churches and universities should look closely at who they invest in," he said. "It seems to me that uni- versities have social responsibilities beyond financial ones. Iranian Students prQtest p- arrest, (Continued from Page 1) The Michigan provision under which the student was arrested states that "any person who shall assemble, march, or parade on any street, highway or public place... while wearing a mask"' is guilty of a misdemeanor. The law doesn't apply in cases involving Halloween masks and oth- er similar circumstances. RUSSELL BALCH, a third year University law student who is rep- resenting the arrested protester, yesterday filed a motion to dismiss the case "on grounds that there are Constitutional problems with the statute." "As a citizen I walk around seeing a lot of people wearing ski masks - they may be in violation of the statute," said Balch. No students wore masks at yester- day ' dem6itration. Some, how- ever, said they have worn them in the past for protection from SAVIK (Iranian Secret Police) agents on campus. The protesters wouldn't revealstheir identities for fear of reprisal. "THE ARREST was a police con- spiracy," said the student who was arrested last month. He said that last, month's demonstration was peaceful and there was no excuse for his arrest. Detective Charles Ferguson of the Ann Arbor Police Department, who is handling the city's investigation, said he couldn't comment on the arrest. Another police spokesman said he doesn't have the "vaguest idea how often the statute was used before this case." He said the department keeps no statistics "on that type of thing." BALCH SAID the statute was previously aimed at quashing Ku Klux Klan rallies on campus. ISA members said they are "deter- mined to carry this struggle till thex voice of our people is heard by all freedom-loving and progressive,' people." CAMPUS CHAPEL invites you to worship: Christmaes Candlelight Servicer A Celebration of Advent; $undq, December 1, 1977-6M 0P.M. SPECIAL MUSIC BY ROYAL WARD, organist CAMPUS CAROL POSTEMA, flutist CHAPE L and the CHAPEL CHOIR 1236 WASHTENAW CT., ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN " 8th ANNUAL U-M SKI TEAM SKI SWAP New or Used Alpine & X-Country Ski Equipm'ent, Clothing, Etc. Where: U-M SPORTS COLISEUM 721 S. Fifth at Hill St. TO SELL: Bring items to Coliseum on Friday, Dec. 9 4 pm to 10 pm, TO BUY: Come Browse in Coliseum on Saturday, Dec. 10 9 am to 7 pm INFO, CALL 662-5477 or 665-9419 Sales commissions charges to help support U-M Ski Team Please no cable bindings or lace boots (except child's) 1' MR ( c 1 Who else could do him justice? The one and only Groucho has brought you 86 years of his fondest memories-in hundreds of photos and drawings. In post- ers and playbills. In his zaniest