Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 28, 1976 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 28, 1976 Postal Service threatens delivery cut WASHINGTON (A) -- Some' members of Congress and lead- ers of postal unions said yes- terday that the country wouldI not accept a cutback in mail de-! livery to three days a week. Three - day - a - week de- livery is among the options open to the deficit - plagued Postal Service in its campaign to cut costs, J. T. Ellington, a senior assistant postmaster gen- eral, disclosed in an interview.I ELLINGTON said "our! most immediate option" is eliminating delivery on Satur- day or one other day of the week. Postal officials had previous- ly said they were considering such a move. Eliminating deliv- ery on Saturday would save 5350 million per year and the savings would be somewhat higher if delivery were drop-! ped on a business day, they said. "We are not excluding any-J thing from consideration," El-I lington added. THE POSTAL Service would have to obtain approval of the Postal Rate Commission, an in- dependent agency, before elim- inating any service. As' d about three-day-a-week delivery, Chairman Charles Wil- son of the House postal facili- ties subcommittee said, "It'sI ridiculous even to consider any- thing like that. It's stupid." Wilson, (D-Calif.), said, "This is going to stir up the Ameri- can people considerably. ANOTHER member of the subcommittee, Paul Simon, (D- Ill.), said, "This is another step in the wrong direction. The Pos- tal Service is making the same mistake that the railroads did. If they cut back service, they are just going to increase their deficits." Sen. Gale McGee, (D-Wyo.), chairman of the Senate Post Of- fice Committee, said, "I don't1 expect three-day service unless others outside the Postal Serv- ice fail to live up to their re- sponsibilities. I'm speaking about Congress and the Presi- dent." postal unions vowed to fight any McGee is sponsoring a bill to plan to reduce deliveries to ease the Postal Service's finan- three days per week. cial crisis by doubling its con- gressional subsidy for three F R A N C I S Filbey, presi- years. The postal deficit is esti- dent of the 350,000-member Am-, mated to reach a record $1.5 erican Postal Workers Union,; billion for the fiscal year end- said his union "would fight any ing June 30. effort to impose such a drastic cut in service." PRESIDENT FORD opposes the bill, and a similar proposal( was voted down in the HouseI last fall. McGee said the Postal Serv- ice does not believe three-day-a- week delivery "would be good postal policy. But they do have to stay solvent. They have to have some alternative ready so that they can pay their bills." Leaders of the two largest DaiyO ic. ia lle ti{ Daily Official Bulletin official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should beE sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to !409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Nova Scotia is Cana province with its o granted by royal char flag originated with the of New Scotland given to Sir William Alexan James, King of Eng James I and of Scot James VI. Saturday, February 28 da's only Day Calendar wn flag Synchronized Swimming: Mich. Invitational, Indoor Track Bldg., 2 ter. The pm. Charter WUOM: Mark Lane, "The Assas-. in 1621 sination of John F. Kennedy;" 1:10 pm; U-M Basketball, 8:30 pm. nder by Indoor Track: Wolverine Invita- ,land as tional, Indoor Track Bldg., 2 pmm. land as Music School: Degree Recitals~- Holden McAleer, bassoon, Recital Hall, 4 pm; Kathy Montgomery, so- prano, Recital Hall, 8 pmm; special benefit concert - Yehudi Menuhin, Gyorgy Sandor, Symphony OOrches- tra, Hill Aud., 8.30 pmm. Saturday Graffiti Radio Maga- zine: Conclusion: Operation Desk- top WCBN 89.5 FM, 5 pm. women's Basketball: U-M vs. Northwestern, Crisler Arena, 6 pm. PTP: New York Hit Series-Over Here, Power, 8 pm. Dance Concert: "Lunar Leap," Arena Theatre, Frieze, 8 pm. - - Asked how the union would do this, Filbey said, "In any way we can, through Congress, or the courts." - James Rademacher, president of the 200,000 - member Nation- al Association of Letter Car- riers, said postal managers "are going to have the fight of their lives" if they try to re- duce delivery days. "I DON'T believe the peo- ple of this country would toler- ate that," he said. Rademacher said he would suggest an amendment to Mc- Gee's bill to require six-day de- livery. EARLY FLAG SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) - Betsy Ross' flag may be famous now, but it wasn't too popular in the revolutionary era. The Sixth U.S. Army says the flag - featuring 13 stars and stripes and 13 stars in a circle -was "scarcely ever used in the period 1777-1795" and then only as a naval ensign. The popularity of the flag, which has traditionally been attributed to Ross, is actually due to artists from Emmanuel Leutze - "Washington Crossing the Delaware" - to Norman Rockwell, according to the' Sixth Army's new flag book. The oldest map known is a clay tablet found in Iraq. Made about 2300 B.C., it probably shows a man's estate in a val- ley, according to the World{ Book Encyclopedia. CAMPUS THEATER SHOWS TODAY AT 1 -3-5-7-9 OPEN! 12:45 E NDS SOON! AP Photo Over the rainbow Citu.pclt k/loPeAIP 2onuco Jan Lockard, 20, applies the last strokes to a mural decorating the walls of the student re- creation room at Allen Memorial Hospital's School of Nursing in Waterloo, Iowa. The paint- ing symbolizes a student's progression through the three-year course, with a diploma as the pot of gold to be found at the end of the rainbow. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Student. Chapel) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St Sunday Service at 10:30 a.m. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 a.m.-Church School. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. 1 * * * * * * ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPELI FIRST PRESBYTERIAN (Catholic) CHURCH 331 Thompson-663-0557 1432 Washtenaw-662-4466 Weekend Masses:j Worship- Sunday, 9:30 and Saturday-5 p.m., 11:30 p.m. 11:00 a.m. Sunday - 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m , Young Adult meals-Sunday, 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, 6:00 p.m. (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). ($1.00). * * * | Study and discussion- ANN ARBOR CHURCH 11:00 a.m. S u n d a y: Adult OF CHRIST I study. 530 W. Stadium Blvd. 12:00-1:00 Thursday: Thursday (one block west of Forum (lunch, $1.25). U of M Stadium) C h a n c e l Choir - 7:00-8:30; Bible Study - Sunday, 9:301 Thursday. a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. For more information about Worship-Sunday, 10:30 m.1 the Young Adult Program call and 6:00 p.m. Jo Ann Staebler at the church, Need Transportation? C a 11 662-4466. 662-9928. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal) 218 N. Division-663-0606 Sundays at noon-Holy Eucha- rist with a meal following. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. * . * CAMPUS CHAPEL-a place for people 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Pastor: Don Postemai 10:15 a.m.-Morning Worship. The Rev. Dirk Evans, guest minister. 6:00 p.m.-Students from the' U of M School of Drama pre- sent three 14th century mystery I plays: "The Creation of Man." "Man's Disobedience and the: Fall of Man," and "The De- luge." Music by Audrey Schuur- mann, organist; Sue Kieren, re- corder; and Nelva te Brake, viola da gamba. 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 Study at 9:15 a.m., Midweek Worship Wednesdayl at 10:00 p.m. ADVERTISING IN THE MICHIGAN DAILY DOESN'T COST ... IT PAYS YOU'RE READING. THE MICHIGAN1 "Volume LXXXVI, Saturday, February is edited and managed at the University of Mi phone 764-0562. Secondc paid at Ann Arbor, Mi( Published d a iily Tues Sunday morning during sty year at 420 Maynar Arbor, Michigan 48109. rates: $12 Sept. thru Ap: ters): ; 13 by mailo Arbor Summer session pub day through Saturd Subscription rates: $6, Aroor; $7.50 by mal Arbor. GRAVDU! BRUNC At HILL Sunday, Fe 11 .m. $1.00 At HILL 1429 HILL DAILY No. 12.8 y 28, 1976 by students chigan. News class postage ichigan 48109. sday through g the Univer- d Street, Ann Nixon keeps quiet on trip criticism Subscription KWEILIN, China (A) - For- prii t2 semes- mer President Richard Nixon outside Ann'me "definitely will not respond to dished Tues- the criticism" of his China trip ay morning, that has come from the United 6.50 in Ann, outside Ann States, an aide said yesterday. The aide, John Brennan, would not elaborate on Nixon's stand regarding domestic criti- -rE cism and declined to discuss specific critical statements, H which have come from long- H,, time Nixon supporter Sen. Bar- _ rv Goldwater of Arizona and Ll L from President Ford among others. * # # #* +k # FIRST UNITED METHODIST FIRST CHUKCH UF UlR I, CHURCH SCIENTIST State at Huron and Washington 1833 Washtenaw Worship Services: Sunday Service and Sunday 8:30 a.m.-Communion Serv- School-10:30 a.m. ice-Chapel. Wednesday Testimony Meet- 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship ing-8:00 p.m. Service-Sanctuary. Child Care-Sunday, under 2 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Church years. School. dMidweek Informal Worship. I Sermon: "The Adopted Moth- Reading Room-306 E. Lib- er," Sermon three in the series erty, 10-6 Monday and Friday; "The Seven Last Words of 10-5 all other days; closed Sun- Jesus" by Dr. Donald B. Strobe. days. WESLEY FOUNDATION NEWS * * * Sunday, Feb. 29: BETHLEHEM UNITED Undergrads - 5:30-Celebra- CHURCH OF CHRIST- tion. 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 6:15-Dinner. Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 7:00 -Program-The Welfare 9:00 a.m.-Chapel Service. System. 10:00 a.m.-Worship Service. Grad group - 7:00 p.m.-Pro- 10:00 a.m.-Church School. gram-Sex and Science. Child care at 10:00 a.m. serv- Wednesday, March 3: ice. Grad coffee social, 4:00-6:00 Service broadcast on WNRS p.m. (1290 AM). I I SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00-3:00-5:00- 7:00-9:00 OPEN 12:45 THAT OLD BLOOD- SUCKER IS BACK! IF YOU LIKED "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" YOU'LL LOVE "OLD DRACULA' b. 29 EL ST. ON THURSDAY, Ford told a Washington interviewer who asked about the effect of the Nixon trip on the New Hamp- shire primary, where the Presi- dent took 51 per cent of the vote over GOP challenger Ron- ald Reagan: "I think the weight of the Join The Daily * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 N. Division. M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-11:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH T HE MICH IGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY is interviewing for JUSTICES for the Central Student Judiciary INTERVIEWS will be held on SUNDAY, Feb. 29, 1976 Sign up for an interview appointment at the MSA OFFICE, 3909 Michigan Union evidence we have so far - we don't have all the evidence in- that it probably was harmful, but I wouldn't want to make that comment at this time." Yesterday, Nixon cruised 50 miles down the Li River past spectacular mountains that he reneatedly compared to pyra- mids. TODAY the Nixon fly to Can- ton, where they will visit a com- mune and the hot springs. They depart Sunday for home. Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer, who recently said Nix- on would report to the White House on his China trip after his return, told reporters in Washington: "Former Presi- dent Nixon will definitely be debriefed when he comes back, but it will not be by me." Kissinger also said he did not expect to see Nixon in Califor- nia. ONE OF the things Nixon is expected to tell the U. S. offic- ials in his debriefing is his im- pression of the current split up in the Peking hierarcy between leftist radicals and the moder- ates they are attacking. In Peking, a poster campaign describing Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping as China's "foremost capitalist leader" began Thurs- day. Teng, groomed for the pre- miership by Chou En-lai in the last two years of his life, had been the No. 1 target in the leftists' campaign against "cap- italist roaders" but had not previously been publicly nam- ed. THE CAMPAIGN organizers stressed that names were not to be used until the accusers were fully confident of their facts. The campaign against "capi- talist roaders" pits radical left- ists rigidly committed to Maoist ideology against moderates fa- voring alternative approaches to China's problems. China's acting premier, Hua Xuo-feng, is associated with the radicals. I I Recipe #11H/2. Y T HE UERVICLE: 1. Find someone who has a freezer. 2. Put a bottle of Jose Cuervo Gold in it. 3. Go away. 4. Come back later that same day. 5. Open the bottle and pour a shot of th( golden, viscous liquid. 6. Drink it with grace and dignity. Or other people, if they're not around, r % i ' . : s .... :;::: ?> >:<:: '' Y ;. . I i. I I ii I I t 1 f i r~ **"t t""a" * .YThere _S ", : difference!!! o. * PREPARE FOR: of exprincencOver 35 years MCAT* and success * Small classes * t LSAT tmish. LSA Voluminous home" GRE studymater'al' constanly updated y * C ~A Tape facilities for * " reviews of class * *" . W M Alessons and for use.* " of supplementary * " FLEX materials t Makehups for t ECFM missed lessons SNATl MED 00$ NATL DENT BDS write or call: f . "-.,