Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 25, 1971 Church wepJAlp der iceAd --_. .__. __. _____. I -_. - j ' { ' ', Jimmy or Jerry? You decide 1 [ i- UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Morning Worship at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Bible Study3 at 9:15 p.m. Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10 p.m. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENEI 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. FIRST UNITED METHODIST FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH CHURCH State at Huron and Washington 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Dr. Donald B. Strobe 662-4466 TheRv. FrdB.ait andWorship at 9:30 and 11:00 on The Rev. Fred B. Maitland Sundays. The Rev. E. Jack Lemon Student coffee hour at 12:00. Worship Services at 9:00 and 4:00 Sunday-Recreation, mu- 11:00. sic, and supper. Bring guitars Church School at 9:00 and and friends. 11:00. College program under direc- Adult Enrichment at 10:00. tion of the Rev. Graham Pat- A TcAMT Iterson., DA IO By AP and Reuter said Ford. "The momentum is who would pay more and those Jimmy Carter yesterday con- on our side." who would pay less. ceded President Ford would Carter told a rally of hisx hold the advantage in their sec- own volunteers in Philadelphia WHEN PRESSED to define and television debate on defense that "I feel good ... and look higher - and lower - income, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST and foreign policy but said he forward to the next one. The he replied: "I don't know. I SCIENTIST expected to win their final clash points I wanted to make demon- would take the mean or median 1833 Washtenaw on general issues. The third de- strate clearly the absence of livel of income and anything Sunday Services and Sunday bate, he said a few hours after leadership of Mr. Ford and the above that would be higher and School-10:30 a.m. the opening debate last night impact on people's lives in the anything below that would be Wednesday Testimony Meet- on economic and domestic is- last two years," Carter said. lower." Carter went on to say ing-8:00 p.m. sues ended in a virtual draw, "I think I did that very ade- that there was no time on the Child Care Sunday-under 2 would be more decisive since quately." campaign trail to draw a spe- years. it was so close to the Novem- cific tax code. Midweek Informal Worship. ber 2 election. CARTER, HOWEVER, credit- However, even after the text Reading Room-306 E. Liber- ed his opponent with "a good was corrected in advance of ty, 10 - 5 Monday - Saturday; BOTH SIDES claimed victory job" and conceded that he him- publication, the Ford campaign closed Sundays. But no one outside the camps self had gotten off to a slow said it stood by its criticism. * * of the Republican incumbent start in the nationally televised A Ford spokesman said the sen- ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF and his Democratic rival was session which reached an audi- tence they were attacking was CHRIST sure if the debate appreciably ence estimated upwards of 100 not the one that was changed, 530 W. Stadium Blvd. affected opinion poll standings million Americans. But he said but rather the one dealing with (one block west of U of M giving Carter a lead. the President was a bit off median income. Stadium) An Associated Press survey, form in the early going as " Ithought Mr. o t Bible Study - Sunday 9:30 conducted by Chilton Research well, fair advantage" of the error, a.m.; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Services, showed that 34.4 per TomI Carter said. "That probably nr.in-Qim i In - .rT.. . TeDemocratic.nomine sa scored against me." x ' 1 But Baker replied with a sim ;)le "No," when asked if an campaigi strategy change might emerge from the debate The firmer Houston lawye said he felt the technical fail ure which interrupted the pro i l a t E 1 .{i >{ k .E ? r' WES£iLEY Ii FU iN ITIA IJN UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY Student groups active pro- gramming worship and study. Stop in or call us. 602 E. Huron, 668-6881. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister 608 E. William, corner of State Worship Service-10:30 a.m. ) () ~ :: =:>L c :wr) t .:.. ()t (),:> >> -T I HAIR FASHION U' AND HAIR CARE I O. CENTER HOME 662-8401 - WE CARE FOR YOUR HAIR WITH HAIR ANALYSIS- A SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO HAIR CARE. OFFICE OF CAMPUS LIFEI AND EUGINE GILMORE PRESENT Earth, Wind and Fire PLUS THE EMOTIONS SUNDAY, OCT. 17-8 p.m. TICKETS: $7 RESERVED, $6 GENERAL No personal checks On sale now at the following locations: -McKENNY UNION -RICHARDSON'S -RICHARDSON'S PHARMACY PHARMACY on Washtenaw, on State Street, Ypsilanti Ann Arbor -MR. MUSIC, in Briorw-ood Mall No smoking or alcoholic beveragesi, the Fieldhouse t E j 1 w r n p - S u n a y , ua a . m . c e n t o h d e b a e v e w e r s CAMPUS CHAPEL-ACampus-ctws he was"a little too reticent Ministry of the Christian and 6:00 p.m. thought Ford had won, 31.8 per in being aggressive against the Reformed Church Need transportation? Call 662- cent gave the edge to Carter, President," a mistake he would 9928.'jamsaeh ol 1236 Washtenaw Ct. * * try to correct in the upcoming Rev. Don Postema, Pastor UNIVERSITY CHURCH debate on foreign policy. Car- Welcome to all students! OF CHRIST ter's advisers earlier had coun- 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship Presently Meeting at the seled him against any strongly "B e a u t y and the Beast" Ann Arbor Y, 530 S. Fifth worded, direct attacks on Ford (Ezekial 28). David Graf, Minister in the first debate, arguing that 11:15 a.m.-Coffee Hour. Students W;elcome. voters might interpret that as 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. For information or transpor- a show of disrespect for the "Love is Realistic." tation: 663-3233 or 426-3808. President.j "God's people in God's world;10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. "I didn't know how exactly for God's purpose." * # s how to deal with the fact that *E*B*SUNIVERSITY REFORMED Mr. Ford was President," he AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH said. But, as the questioning CAMPUS CENTER 1001 E. Huron . went on, "I got over the hesi- 502 E. Huron-663-9376 Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, tancy about attacking his rec- Ronald E. Carey, Ministers ord just because he was Presi- Campus Minister 9:30 a.m. - Classes for all I dent, and I relaxed and enjoyed Sunday Morning Worship-10 ages. the debate." a.m. First Baptist Church. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. Bible Study-11 a.m. 5:00 p.m.-Co-op Supper. CARTER SAID he thought he Fellowship Meeting Tuesday 6:00 p.m.-Informal Evening scored his best points on in- at 7:30 p.m. Service. flation, unemployment and "the ---* - record of Mr. Ford as an ex- BETHEL A.M.E. CHURCH 6 tension of historical Republican 900 Plum-663-3800 policies." Rev. John A. Woods, Pastor But he gave the President Sunday Morning Services - some credit for points he made O8:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. in rebuttal to Carter statements Sunday School-9:00 a.m. eon jobs and the Democratic po- Transportation available. sition on taxes. ST. MARY STUDENT "He showed he had been in CHAPEL (Catholic) government a long time but his 1U1 ompson- 3-0Caexperience exceeded mine in SubscriptionfTWeekend Masses: that he wouldn't rock the boat." I Saturday, 5 p.m., 11:30 p.m. 26.0 per cent called it a draw CARTER TOLD reporters be- Today1 Sunday - 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., and 7.8 per cent said they didn't fore boarding his campaign 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. know who had won. plane that the President "prob- 7o4-,Q* ,- Statistically, the small advant- ably scored against me" with LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN age scored by Ford was too a calculated distortion during CHURCH (ALC-LCA) small to declare him a winner. the debate of his views on tax- Gordon Ward, Pastor Experts say that the survey ation. 801 S. Forest at Hill St. sample could err by 2.9 per It was "a deliberate distor- Sunday Service at 11:00 a.m. cent from what the result would tion of the President on the AP be if the entire registered voter story about taxing middle-in- population were surveyed. come groups," he said. "As y j fyou know, the AP editors inter- KhMEANWHILE, the President viewed meand erroneously left 1Therestold a group of partisans at a out part of the transcript. I one thi downtown Philadelphia hotel thought Mr. Ford took unfair advantage." that the confrontation was a In the interview, Carter talk- eturnng poit in the campaign ed of shifting the burden of tax- finding out and put the momentum in his ation from lower and middle-in- roduced Year-in- favor. "From what I've heard, come taxpayers to those who YOU we did all right in that de- have higher incomes. Carter cbate." said he did not know where c"nCer,n nhE~r_ The polls are going our way," to draw the line between those j { i14 V14N ilsUalaVi 1114 I DURING THE DEBATE, Ford referred to the interview, say- ing that Carter had indicated "he would increase the taxes on about 5 per cent of the working people in this country." In his rebuttal, Carter said, "Mr. Ford has misquoted an AP news story that was in er- ror to begin with ... I'm sure the President knows about this correction, but he still insists on reporting an erroneous state- ment." Ford This left Carter and the Re- publicans talking about two dif-, gram for 27 minutes might have ferent parts of the interview. contributed to what he viewed as the failure of both Carter FORD'S CAMPAIGN man- and Ford to perform as well ager, James Baker, said Ford as they could in their summa- was a "clear-cut" winner in the tions. debate, but that both candidates Television executives blamed were weak in their summations. a tiny electronic part costing He said the President likely about $1 for the sound inter- would watch a videotape re- ruption in, the debate. They said play last night before leaving' the part, an electronic capaci- on a weekend campaign trip tor, malfunctioned. It's no big- on a Mississippi riverboat. ger than a cigarette filter. Locals find Ford- Carter debate dull (Continued from Page 1) several dormitories were filled According to Fleming, the sec-1 and the sound of Carter's south- ond and third debates will im- ern drawl and Ford's midwest- prove. Carter and Ford will be ern twang resounded from be- more relaxed, he said, and they hind many closed doors. will benefit from counseling on Freshwoman Celeste Ross, strengths and weaknesses. who watched the debates with Ann Arbor councilwoman several friends, was unimpress- Carol Jones was sure that one ed. "A lot of what they said candidate had emerged victor- about billions of dollars went ions from the two-and-a-half-- right over my head,'' she said. hour confrontation. "They were both playing the same game with figures." "Although both made things "We talked about it in jour- clear," she said, "II really feel nalism class and took a vote," that Ford was the loser on cer- said Tim Knight. "A few chang- tain issues." ed their minds (about which candidate they would vote for), "ONE THING which really but in discussion we decided stuck in my mind was energy that the debates had not been c ( for changing minds but for re- proposals) on the issue," Jones inforcement." added. Donna Shepard said she was She also cited the different totally unimpressed. "I didn't policies of the two in respect to think it was like a debate; just the question of amnesty for draft a bunch of political speeches." evaders and agreed with Carter Ross summed up her feelings, that Ford's "deserters - should- "At least the closing remarks were tear-jerking. All that pa- earn - their - citizenship - back" triotic" suff really gets to you." policy was ironic in light of his pardon of former President THE MICHIGAN DAILY Richard Nixon. 5 MICHIGAN YEARB N W N SA U-M ALL CAMPUS Student Run, Student P Review. Buy NOW before the price increase in Nove MICHIGANENSIAN--The Year-in-Review --first come, first served. Please reserve one copy of the 1977 MICHIG in my name. I have enclosed a check fo understand I can pick up the book in early r Name__Phone f a Ann Arbor Address * If you need to have the book mailed, ad Perm. Address RECEIPTS WILL BE MAILED If you would like more information call 764 Muer. . Limited Supply GANENSIAN or $10.00. I April. I I E - " I Id $1.00 ; -0561 Not finding out. Many cancers can be cured if discovered early enough. Get a regularthealth check- up. Start now. We want to wipe out cancer in your lifetime. Give to the American Cancer Society. Cacer Wsociety 748 SPACE CC)NTRpg{JTfpBY THtE P'J&ISritR Pierce and Pursell confront the issues p i0 I g 'a o ti p tj C This Fall, self-indulgence Is forgivable at Ram's Head. It] Since the leather and ther craftsmanship of a Ram's Head p coat is no less than awesome, ?giving yourself one is quite p understandable. You mightp show appreciation for your- self in something like The Dakota, Justin or Kamala, f 7 all from Oshwahkon and Paul Louis. Even if you don't buy ~ /anything at Ram's Head Leather Works this fall, at least don't deny yourself a visit.j ;''ACROSS FROM JACOBSON'S (Continued from Page 1) two Repubicans joined up with volumeIxxxv11N, NO. 1 public office is a 1964-1966 stint council Democrats to override Student interest in the debates; Saturday, September 25, 1976 on the Ann Arbor City Council. the GOP majority. Iran high. Television rooms in at teUniversity o m ichigan. Nens The 46-year-old Pierce also be- phone 764-0562. Second class postage gan his remarks light-heartedly, IN THE question and answer paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. with a self-deprecatory joke but period that followed, queries Published d a 11ly Tuesday through Sunday or'2duigtetnv- also quickly slid into grim seri- concerning the Mideast and the sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann ousness. He said he was per- federal budget drew most of the Arbor. Michigan 48109. Subscription turbed by the lack of trust in attention. rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- politicians and political institu- When asked if he would ap-ers. $13 by mali outsie Ann tions that has arisen recently. prove continued aims for Is- summer session published ''ues- rael, Pierce replied in the af- you ;day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann THE FORMER family doctor firmative and then took the op- j Arbor; $7.50 by mal outside Ann said he was having a hard time portunity to criticize U. S. arms- Arbor comprehending this mistrust be- selling policy.'see cause, "in my daily life, it's Pierce called the U. S. "the' been very unusual for a patient major arms supplier in the new s to look at me and say he doesn't world", and said: "It's a dis- trustme."1 grce."Qualifying rounds Pierce went on to attack the grace." Republican Party, for ignoring PURSELL, ON the subject of happen Men s and Women's the problems of the poor. federal deficits, blamed the, As an example, Pierce refer- Democratic - controlled Con-BolgTa red to a Fair Housing Ordinance gress for enlarging the federal passed by the Ann Arbor City debt. Sunday, Sept. 2--6 p.m. Council during his tenure. Ac- "Sometimes we have to say cording to Pierce, poor people no," declared Pursell. "Muskie, 76-DA LY U NION LANES picketed council meetings for! some other Democratic con- "nearly two years" calling for gressman - they are responsi- passage of the ordinance before ble for the present situation."Sgn up now -s--I--_-- THINKING OF WAYS TO MAKE MONEY? Sell commissioned subscriptions for C)lp Gihin Blt $ 5 CS I