Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 19, 1977 ~aur . _bray.9, 17 7 1r ._._ .M. - __ ._ . -.-- _ _ 1 CA iarct Wop4Alp £enice4 'DAILY DIGEST FEBRUARY 19, 1977 yr .. I _I ... _ . _ CAMPUS CHAPEL-A Campus Rev. Don Postema, Pastor Reformed Church Ministry of the Christian 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Welcome to all students! 10:00 a.m. - Morning Worship -"Faith and Life." 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. "God's people in God's world for God's purpose." FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Services and Sunday School-10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meet- ing-8:00 p.m. Child Care Sunday-under 2 years. Midweek Informal Worship. Reading Room-306 E. Liber- ty, 10 - 5 Monday - Saturday; UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN closed Sundays. CHAPEL (LCMS) * * * 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 ST. MARY STUDENT} Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor CHAPEL (Catholic) Sunday Morning Worship at 331 Thompson-663-0557 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Weekend Masses: Sunday Morning Bible Study . Saturday, 5 p.m., 11:30 p.m. at 9:15 p.m. Sunday - 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. 10 p.m. (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). UNIVERSITY REFORMED I 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 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-11:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. * * * i FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 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 Schomaker, Chaplain/Director 10 a.m.-Morning Worship. 5:30 p.m. - Celebration/Fel- lowship. 6:15 p.m.-Shared Meal, 75c. Extensive programming for undergrads and grad students. Stop in or call 668-6881 for in- formation. International assassination attempt Idi Amin NAIROBI, Kenya - Uganda's President Idi Amin declared yesterday that the deaths of theI black Anglican archbishop of. Uganda and of two government ministers were "a punishment I of God," Uganda Radio said. The radio, monitored nore, said autopsies performed on Archbishop Janani Luwum and the two officials accused with him of plotting against Amin proved they died of injuries suffered in an auto crash. Outraged protests from church and human rights groups, offi- cials, politicians and newspapers around the world, however, indi-' cated a widespread conviction that the three men had been ;. murdered. The Ugandan broadcast, mon- itored in Nairobi, quoted Amin' telling a visiting U.N. delega- tion that he was not worried{ about international criticism be- cause "he was not guilty nf any crime." It quoted him saying the auto, accident was "a punishment of God because God does not want to make others suffer." According to the Ugandan gov-, ernment, Archbishop Luwum! and government ministers Charles Oboth-Ofumbe and Er-; mao Oryema died in an auto-1 mobile crash shortly after they! were arrested Wednesday night' for complicity in an alleged plot to overthrow Amin. The govern- ment radio claimed the three men caused the crash when they: tried to overpower the driverf taking them to a detention cen- ter. Pres. Videla CHURCH 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministersf 9:30 a.m. - Classes fo ages. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Wor 5:00 p.m.-Co-op Supper. 6:00 p~m.-Informal Evi Service. LORD.OF LIGHT LUTHER. CHURCH (ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Service at 11:00 Feb. 20th, installation of Ron Nilson. Ash Wednesday Service, 23rd, 7:30 p.m. r all FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHUR{CH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 662-4466 Sunday Morning Worship at 9:30 and 11:00. Student coffee hour-12 noon. 4:00 Sunday - Father William Gavin will discuss "Spirituality and the Roman Catholic Tradi- tion.' 6:00-Dinner; $1.25. Monday Noon-Faith Seeking Understanding Study Group. AMERICAN BAPTIST a.m. Mr. &. CAMPUS CENTER 502 E. Huron-663-9376 Feb. Ronald E. Carey, Campus Minister CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY --OPENINGS- The Michigan Student Assembly is now accepting applica- tions for the five openings on the Student Supreme Court. The Judiciary renders decisions on student activity griev- ances, particularly with regard to student organizations and student government. To apply and for further information, come to the MSA offices at 3909 Michigan Union Build- ng; or call 763-3241 or 763-3242. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST' Presently Meeting at theE Ann Arbor Y, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister Students Welcome. For information or transpor-' tation: 663-3233 or 426-3808. 10:00 a.m.-Sunday 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--10 a.m. First Baptist Church. Bible Study-11 a.m. Fellowship Meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Join The Daily BUENOS AIRES -- Argentina President Jorge Videla narrow- ly escaped death yesterday when a bomb exploded on an airport runway moments after his plane lifted off an adjacent strip. No one was hurt in theI blast. It was the third attempt on Videla's life in recent years and! the second since he took over the Argentine presidency after President Isabel Peron was de- posed last March. Hundreds of army troops and policemen quickly ringed the airport in northern Buenos Aires, which serves domestic flights, to search for more bombs and suspects. There were no immediate arrests and no other explosives were found. The president's twin-engine' executive jet flew to a suburban air force base after the blast and was checked out for dam-' age. None was found and it con- tinued on to the Atlantic port of Bahia Blanca, 500 miles to the south, where Videla is to visit a new offshore oil rig. j The damaged airport was quickly shut down and all flights! were detoured to Ezeiza Inter-. national Airport, 30 miles to the; northwest.} A government communiqueI said the bomb was planted in a: drainage pipe underneath a strip adjoining the runway from which the presidential plane took off. him so exclusively that it most effectively makes the point that no one else was involved, the report said. The task force concluded that various conspiracy theories, in- cluding those advanced by. Ray himself, are without foundation. Ray's stories are contradictory and self-serving, the report said. The FBI, despite its long-term' and probably illegal campaign to harass King and dis-redit him as a civil rights leader, gener- ally undertook an aggressive probe of his murder on a motel balcony in Memphis 31 Aug. 4, 1968, the task force sail. It add- ed that the bureau checked out the conspiracy theories but found nothing to them. Inflation WASHINGTON - Consumer prices increased eight-tenths of one per cent in January, double the December rate and the big- gest inflationary surge in 18 months, and government econ- omists warned yesterday of an- other big increase in February and possibly March. President Carter also was handed unfavorable reports yes- terday on workers' earnings, on the cost of housing and on growth in the nation's Gross Na- tional Product, all of which could make it more difficult for him to achieve his economic! goals this year.I Higher costs for food and fuel led to the price surge in Janu- ary. Overall food costs were up nine-tenths of one per cent, more than the increase of six- tenths of one per cent during all of 1976. Furthermore, the Labor De- partment said'its January Con- sumer Price Index did not re- flect the full price impact of the severe winter weather. That probably will show up in the! price report for February and possibly March, said one top government economist. But even though prizes in-, creased in January at an annual' rate of nearly 10 per cent, May- nard Comiez of the Commerce Department said he thinks the E underlying inflation rate prob- ably is still between five per'1 cent and six per cent. Consumer1 prices rose 4.8 per cent auring i all of 1976. s "The figures may be clouded t by the severe weather imoact,' the maintenance of equipment, said Comiez. "It may be a special speed limits, the use of couple of months before we have certain highways and driver an opportunity to get a picture certification," Milliken said. of what the underlying trend' Public concern over the safety of inflation is, he said. of trucks carrying flammable gasses and liquids reached a Cross country new peak last week w'ien two of the vehicles were involved record in firey crashes on petroit -free- ways. JACKSONVILLE BEACH, Fla. At least 52 truck firei, half of -Karl Thomas set his nine- them involving mechanical fail- story-tall yellow balloon down' res, were reported in Michigan on a remote island beach yes-Ii the first nine months of last .f ;year. There were 58 such Mci- terday after an 18-day zig-zag dents in all of 1975, according to crossing of the United States to one report. claim a record for transcontin- Special concern has focused ental flight in a hot air balloon. on allegedly unwieldy tandem The 28-year-old German-born trucks which are banned in 11 adventurer landed- his 5-by-5 states but allowed n Michigan foot wicker basket at 2:30 p st.l d M i on the Atlantic Ocean side beach of Bird Island, near the mouth stc of the St. Johns River, :eaving - ottle ban a corps of reporters and photog- raphers stranded on another is- L A N S I N G - State public land across the river. health officials have recom- The newsmen had hoped to! mended that Michigan residents greet him after an expected avoid purchasing Coca Cola in landing on Jacksonville Beach; plastic bottles until questions but a last minutes wind shift,, about their health effects are blew Thomas northward. answered. Thomas, a Troy, Mich. psy-. "There is no evidence at all chologist launched his balloon linking the plastic containers to on Feb. 1, from the Los Angeles | any kind of health problem -in area. | people, so the department's rec- ommendation is simply a sen- sible precaution until we have State more information,' Dr. Ken- neth Wilcox, chief of disease I control for the state Deoartirent Tr"uck I of Public Health, said yesterday. Wilcox said an interim Food in p ci'and Drug Administration report found that the chemical acrylon- LANSING - Safety inspec- itrile, used in plastic beverage tions of fuel-carrying trucks, bottles, produced weight loss which started earlier this month, i and "other abnormal'ties" in will be stepped up dramatically test animals. next week while State Police of- It is not known, he said, whe- ficials develop emergency regu- ther any plastic from the bottles lations. ends up in the beverage. Gov. William Milliken an- "However, the heakh depart- nounced yesterday that the five ment has taken the- position marshal division of the State that, in view of the evidence Police will temporarily drop' showing the chemical may be some of its normal duties in or- harmful, and, considering That der to put eight inspection teams we do not know what its effects in the field for 30 days starting may be on humans, it is pru- Feb. 22. dent to simply avoid using soft "In view of the recent rash drinks packaged in this type of of accidents involving such bottle until more ;s known," trucks, we must move quickly Wilcox said. to see that safety standards areI The department said FDA cf- maintained while new emf"gen- ficials have suspended approv- cy rules are adopted relating al of plastic bottles containing to controls which could include the chemical. National King probe WASHINGTON - The FBI in-? vestigated Dr. Martin Luther King's death thoroughly and honestly and concluded correct- ly that James Earl Ray was the lone assassin, a Justice Depart-+ ment task force reported yes- terday. Though mysteries linger in the case, there is no new evidence warranting further investigation,; the task force of five lawyers+ and two research analysts said.I "The sum of all of the evi-; dence of Ray"s guilt points to 'U zN+ - f, Il MUSIC. Evening Performance' 8:00 p.m. Matinee, Apri 3 , 2:00 p.m. Tickets 4's) , $3.50, $4.00, $4.50 Tickets available at ,q UAC Ticket Central 5' j i " i t Dems face off in Fifth Ward (Continued from Page 1) people with entrenched interests that are getting in the way of the city. "I think public employes should be just that," he says. "I' don't think employes should be{ running baronial fiefdoms." port Belcher's mayoral candi- dacy. Roughly bounded by Maple Rd., Pauline Blvd. and Seventh St., the Fifth Ward has not been carried by a Democrat in any city election since 1969. A few students are interspersed in some Old West Side precincts, but the rest of the ward is ira- di innllsn rncraiv P brh "THERE just isn't the money need professionals and techni- we need to do all the things we cians to make policy decisions." need to do," says Hanks. "We must get more state and feder- LUDWIG agrees on that point. al monies. We need a hard- "We need to push for fiscal pow- nosed bureaucrat who knows er to be held by elected offi- what's there, and get him to go cials. This is counter to the way after it." the present city government is If elected, Hanks says she' set up." would push for a new City Char- Both candidates also feel that ter. maintenance of existing city "The present Charter was services should be a high bud- drawn up to keep politics out of get priority. city government because people "I'm a businessman," says didn't know what they wanted," Ludwig. "I like to figure out she says. "Ann Arbor is no long- how to make money rather than er that kind of town - we don't spend it." BOTH HANKS and Ludwig Ucti y a conservaive e concede that their political dif- lican stronghold. ferences are minimal, and exist H mostly in matters of strategyi. HANKS, who has been ac - and tactics. Ludwig -has refused in many public service to support Democratic M ayor; tures throughout the ward, Albert Wheeler in his bid for re- ;ieves she can carry the F election. against incumbent Republ "It was hard to make that de- Coincil member Gerald Be cision to withdraw my support."' Demcratsrhere. If youh he says. "But there were per- temothe e yohay sonal differences I could rot re- them the feeling they hav solve." On the other hand, Lud- voice they'll come out wig "absolutely" will not sup- vote,"'she says. "One of u ___________ ____going to beat Bell." Both candidates say t concerns include: better h ing for low-income famil maintenance of streets, _ be use of public transportat parking and zoning problems vestment in the downtown a u " , and the upkeep of old homes landlords. puoI +ive ' ven- be- fifth ican J1... den; give e a and s is, heir ous- lies, j a I i Post alleges CIA bribes to Hussein (Continued from Page 1) The payments to the former MARTY'S ... GOES DUTCH TREAT WITH THEIR SECOND ANNUAL... DUTCH AUCTIC IN NOW THRU SATURDAY SPORT COATS r REGU--R -----S U IT! S r w V REGULAR PRICE 1125 $145 $165 1185 ,$225 1275 $107 $127 ~165 $140 1O $0 $150 $205 $254 DUTH TREAT $90 $11 1120 1130 ,180 1225 FRIDAY'S DUTCH TREAT 172 $92 si 0.0 $1l0 $155 _ $200 SATURDAY'S DUTCH TREAT $55 $75 180 190 130 ;175 REGULAR PRICE 140 $50 $60 $85 $100 $125 WEDNESDAY'S DUTCH TREAT $30 140 150 $70 $90 $105 $25 $35 160 $80 90 FRIDAY'S DUTCH TREAT $15 X25 $30 150 ;b5 $75 SATURDAY'S DUTCH TREAT $10 .$15 $20 $30 $45 $55 tter O'Connell could not be reach- west UermIn ctienor were ion, j ed for comment, btit records .used toStrengthen the Social in- on file with the Justice Depart- Democratic party, Marchetti rea, ment show his law firm has re- said, while Kenyatta, still, pres- by ceived $333,000 in legal fees ident ofmKenya, diverted much from the Jordanian government of the money to his personal gvmnuse. "'We had to double Keny- torepresent its interests here ttas stipend ecaue he wa using it all up himself," Mar- Marchetti, former executive chetti said. assistant to the deputy director of the CIA, and Marks, former -IN AMMAN, Jordan, a gov- assistant to the State Depart- ernment spokesman said the ment's director of intelligence, Post renort "is a combination are still prevented by a court j of fabrication aid distortion. order from discussing the con- The Jordanian leadership has tents of the deleted portions not e-gaged in imoroper prac- of their 1974 book. tices or p'irsued personal inter- . y~es+5 HOWEVER, Marchetti point- The snokesman added that the ed out that he had previously timine of the Post report "in- identified Kenyatta and Brandt dicates that a deliberate at- as recipients of CIA funds. temot is made to damage the Marchetti said he had cited the rmage of the Jordanian leader- i h shin on the event of the*visit two leaders during an inter- to Jordan by the U. S. secre- view on Canadian television as !tar , of state and to prevent the receiving contrasting types of 'icliess of the neacomaking ef- secret payments. farts of Mr. Cyrus Vance." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE'TIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an' Stuet organization notices are official publication of the Univer- not accepted for publication. For sity of Michigan. Notices should be more information, phone 764-9270. sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to. 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of Saturday, February 19, 1977 the day preceding publication and SUMMER PLACEMENT by 2 p.m Friday for Saturday and 3200 SAB - 763-4117 Sunday. Items appear once only. Dana Corp., Ottawa Lake, Mr.: Opening for Mech. and Metallurgical Til NI'Ul"(;Alq DAILY engrs. in tech. lab. Must have car Volume LXXXVII, No. 117 to get to work. Further details Saturday. February 19. 1977 available. ., ~275 ~250 ~225 ~200 $105 $9Q $75 $55 5 .4 CASUAL SAK DRESS SLACKS SWEATERS IL A ...1 f-.--P '- LEISURE SUITS REG. DUTCH DUTCH DUTCH DUTCH PRICE TREAT TREAT TREAT TREAT $45 $38 $31$ 24 $17 $50 $42 $34 $26 $18 $75 $64 $53 $42 $31 Q C $74 2$l $An $' LEATHER COATS : LEATHER JACKETS5A OFF TOlP COATS - I I I II I I -Il