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January 17, 1976 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-01-17

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday; January 1'7, 1976

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 17, 1976

Chuch

W1OPAI; eOice4

Kidnap charges dropped Patty

ordered

CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw Ct
Pastor: Don Postema
Christian Reformed Warship.
Sunday Worship-10 a.m. and
6 p.m.
* -A
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.
* * *
LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
CHURCH (ALC-LCA)
(Formerly Lutheran Student
Gordon Ward, Pastor
Chapel)
801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St'
Sunday Service at 10:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.; Wednesday, 6:00
p.m. ($1.00).
Study and discussion-
11:00 a.m. Sunday-Adult Bible
study.
8:00-9:00 p.m. Monday-semi-
nar on Dietrich Bonhoeffer's
"rhe Cost of Discipleship."
12:00-1:00 Thursday - Thurs-
day Forum (includes lunch, $1).
Chancel C h o i r - 7:00-8:30
Thursday.
For other information on the
Young Adult Program call the
Rev. Peter C. Budde or Jo Ann
Staebler, 662-4466.
UNIVERSITY REFORMED
CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron
Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice,
Ministers
9:30 a.m.-Church School.
5:30 p.m.-Student Supper.
10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship.
TONIGHT
SEVEN YEAR ITCH
with Marilyn Monroe
ROOM 100 LAW SCHOOL
7 and 9 p.m.
ADMISSION $1

UNIVERSITY CHURCH
OF CHRIST
Presently Meeting at
YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth'
David Graf, Minister
Students Welcome.
For information or transpor-
tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494.
10:00 a.m. - Sunday Worship
Service.
* * *
ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL.
(Catholic)
331 Thompson-663-0557
Weekend Masses:
Saturday-5 p.m., 11:30 p.m.
Sunday - 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m.
(plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus).1
* * *
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN ,
CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw-662-4466
Worship - Sunday, 9:30 and
11:00 a.m.
HolyaCommunion-Wednesday,
5:15-5:50 p.m.
Young Adult meals - Sunday,
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
State at Huron and Washington
Worship Services:
8:30 a.m.-Communion Serv-
ice-Chapel.
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship
Service-Sanctuary.
9:30and 11:00 a.m. - Church
School.
Sermon: "Ninevitis and Its
Cure," by Rev. W. Thomas
Schomaker.
Broadcast on WNRS (1290)
AM radio from 11:00-12:00 noon
each Sunday.
WESLEY FOUNDATION NEWS
Sunday, Jan. 18:
5:30 p.m. - Undergrads-Cel-
ebration, dinner, and planning
session.
7:30 p.m.-Sunday Grad Group
meet at Wesley Foundation.
Thursday, Jan. 22:
6:00 p.m.-Grads meet W.F.
for Pot-luck and discussion
group.

BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149
Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann
9:00 a.m.-Chapel Service.
10:00 a.m.-Worship Service.
10:00 a.m.-Church School.
Child care at 10:00 a.m. serv-
ice.
Service broadcast on WNRS
(1290 AM).
* * *
CANTERBURY HOUSE
(Episcopal)
218 N. Division-665-0606
Sundays at noon-Holy Eucha-
rist with a meal following.
* * *
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 9a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.
Need Transportation? C a 11
662-9928.
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 Wednesday,
at 10:00 p.m.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw
Sunday Service and Sunday
School-10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Testimony Meet-
ing-8:00 p.m.
Child Care-Sunday, under 2
years; Wednesday, through 6
years.
Midweek Informal Worship.
Reading Room-306 E. Lib-
erty, 10-6 Monday and Friday;
10-5 all other days; closed Sun-
days.

(Continued from Page 1)
of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP), had held them
against their will.
But Ms. Stegall, now 64, later I
contacted Williams and said the
couple had been pressured by
authorities and their neighbors
to testiy against the civil rights
leader. Bruce Stegall died last
January.
AFTER FLEEING prosecu-
tion and traveling in Cuba,
China, and East Africa, Wil-
liams gained stature among
militants as president of the
black nationalist Republic of
New Africa (RNA). He met
with numerous socialist leaders
and was photographed leading
a parade with Chinese Commu-
nist party Chairman Mao Tse-
Tung.
At the time of his arfest, Wil-
liams was virtually the only
black civil rights leader calling
for armed self-defense-a battle
cry adopted later by the Black
Panther Party and other mili-
tant groups.
In 1970-71, Williams worked as
r .

a consultant with the Univer- When told of Dist. Atty. Low-
sity's Center for Chinese Stu- der's final blast at Williams,
dies, where he wrote an unpub- the black leader's wife was si-
lished book on China, Drums to lent for a moment. Then she
Kill a Dragon. I laughed and said, "Mr. Lowder
is a very small man."
FOR THE last six years he She and Williams' lawyer,
has fought extradition to North Karen Galloway, said they had
Carolina on the kidnap charge. known of Mabel Stegall's illness
Last month, the Michigan Su- for sometime but doubted that1
preme Court refused his final was the reason for dropping the
appeal, affirming a lower court's charges.
order forcing Williams to face
trial. "I KNOW that she did not
Wililams, en route to Monroe want to testify," said Galloway
for the trial's scheduled Mon- yesterday. "Lowder's attitude1
day opening, could not be reach- is typical of that town . . . he
ed for comment on yesterday's just had to have a way out."
decision. -Williams never gained mass
His wife Mabel, contacted at support for his RNA, but the
their home in Baldwin, Mich., Republic's colors .- red, black,
said, "Oh, my goodness, that's and green-were widely adopted
wonderful news!" as an emblem of bl--k solidar-
SHE SAID she was not sure ity.
if Williams knew of the decision He continues writ and lec-
yet. "It took us such a long turing to college audiences
time,," she said, "but we knew about black issues.
they would capitulate. It's not
really a big victory. It is not Long Beach, Calif., State's
really the end, and I know it. Dan Bunz was in on 28 tackles
It's not just Monroe, but Rob- iti an October game against
ert's w h o 1 e political back- Drake. State won the game 31-
ground." 10.

to

take test

By AP and Reuter
SAN FRANCISCO - Publish-
ing heiress Patricia Hearst,
awaiting trial on bank robbery
charges, was ordered yesterday
to submit to further examina-
tion by a government psychia-
trist she said had bullied her.
Federal Judge Oliver Carter
ruled that Hearst's examination
by Dr. Harry Kozol must con-
tinue "at the earliest possible
time."
THE JUDGE made his ruling
after a two-day hearing in
which Hearst's lawyers, putting
her on the witness stand for the
first time, tried to show that
Kozol had exceeded his brief
and should be prevented from
questioning her further.
Judge Carter said: "The de-
fense has not carried its bur-
den to show that Dr. Kozol is
not qualified by his actions on
January 7, 1976, to continue in
his role as a potential expert
witness for the government."
The controversy over Kozol
centered on his first meeting
with Hearst on January 7.
SHE ALLEGED that he had
told her she had gotten herself
kidnapped by the radical Sym-
bionese Liberation Army (SLA)
in 1974.

Kozol denied that contention.
Hearst also claimed the doc-
tor had asked her ifrshe was
proud of her alleged role in an
SLA bank robbery that follow-
ed her kidnapping and she re-
plied that she was not.
He denied asking such a ques-
tion.
Hearst's trial on charges
stemming from the bank rob-
bery is scheduled to begin on
January 26.
Carter also warned that if
the defense failed to comply, he
would not hesitate to impose
"appropriate sanctions" during
the newspaper heiress's bank
robbery trial. He said these
could include "the exclusion of
the testimony of any expert wit-
ness offered by the defendant
on the issue of her mental
state."
Prosecutors declined com-
ment on the ruling, and
Hearst's attorneys were not
available i m m e d i a t e 1 y.
However, chiefhdefense counsel
F. Lee Baily had said Thurs-
day he would be "ethically
committed" to read any such
order to Hearst, but she ulti-
mately would decide whether to
comply.

j~g 1Wtr1~tiqan ahi

iS
PEOPLE
LIKE

Psychic 'heals' with
subconscious power

ROB MEACH UM
CO-EDITOR
"We print all the news
that fits"

I

N

-1

Pizza Bob's Welcomes Everybody Back!
- WE INVITE YOU DOWN TO BOTH OUR LOCA-
TIONS-STILL SERVING THE BEST IN TOWN ... .

The DAILY IS OTHER THINGS TOO.. .

(Continued from Page 1) 1
doctor. And the only paymentI
he's ever accepted for his ser-
vices? "Once, I took some
homemade applesauce."
Both the poor and prestigious,
believers and skeptics, have
sought his aid. But they all
have one thing in common, says
Morgan. Doctors have already
seen them and "they don't havea
anywhere else to go."
"A vice president from Dow
Chemical Co. came to me with
a kidney stone. His doctor had
said he had to be operated on
but the VP didn't have the
time," recounts Morgan.
"I WORKED on him twice;
then he never camehback. His
wife called later and said the
stone had disappeared."
As f o r skeptical patients,
"They make no difference," as-
serts Morgan. "Their coopera-
tion isn't necessary in the heal-
ing process because I deal not
with their conscious, but their
Ssubconscious."
S But how -does Morgan actually

perform the healing? The pro-
cedure takes place in two parts.
"WHEN AN individual comes
to see me, I will scan them
with my subconscious," said
Morgan. "In the case of one
woman I saw a diseased liver,
purple with splotches all over
it."
He then connects with the pa-
tient's subconscious mind, to
"erase" the ailnient. "Seeing
the diseased liver, I mentally
I pushed the splotches aside, to
get the blood coming to the
liver."
Although he's experienced in-
stantaneous "miracle" healings,
they do not often occur. "Each
person will be healed in his own
time, not mine," says Morgan.
HIS PRESENTATION is not
flashy but in spite of the low-
key manner, the audience tends
to believe him.
Said one public health stu-
dent: "It can't be measured
scientifically so there's a lot of
skepticism, but, if he makes one
person feel better then more
power to him."

o PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE in

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814 S. S
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izza Bob's sub, sandwich,
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o AND STAFF PARTIES

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4

I

MASS MEETING

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810 S. STATE
665-4518

OPEN 1 1-2 A.M.

I

Tuesday & Wednesday
January 20, 21
Kuenzel Room, 1st Floor Michigan Union
7:30 pm.

PIRGIM
(Continued from Page 1)
refund in person at the Student
Activities Building.
Many students felt that this
system was unfair to those who
did not want to contribute. They
argued that those who wanted
to donate the $1.50 should be
inconvenienced rather than
those who wished not to pay.
The Regents appointed a com-
mittee of students, PIRGIM

-1 -

vote

to listen to
If you watch 60 minutes on CBS you ought
the Ann Arbor radio magazine
TODAY at 5:00:
" Frank Beaver reviews the best films of 1975 with
Elijah Langford and critic Linda Fidel.
" John Hendricks munches goodies at the Cracked Crab.
* A visit to Anh Arbor's most unique plant shop.
* Moe Klippel's moe-mentary wisdom.
* How to pick a stereo cartridge.
0 Snowmobile driving tips.
" Heavy music happenings with the rockman.
" Americo-a poetic ballad with a different type
of bicentennial awareness.
JOIN HOSTS- MARK LLOYD AND GUY LUDWIG FOR
ANN ARBOR'S MOST UNIQUE RADIO PROGRAM

i

I1

JO H
- .
WILL BE AT CENTICORE
MONDAY, JAN. 19, 1-3 P.M.
AUTOG RAP

members and University offic-
ers to investigate possible new
funding plans.
AT THE December Regents
meeting, the committee propos-
ed a new system retaining the
automatic charge, but making
it easier to obtain a refund. A
form will be sent out with each
tuition bill which a student can
return at any time during the
term.
The Regents approved this
plan for January, but asked
the committee for a -more com-
plete. report before deciding
hor to run things next term.
At this Thursday's meeting,
the committee which was to
have proposed a new system for
the fall instead asked the Re-
gents to wait and see how this,
term's plans works before mak-
ing their decision.
Local.
bank
ro eries
increase
(Continued from Page 1)
Godtle went on to say that
some officials believe the rob-
beries in Ann Arbor may be due
in part to programs in nearby
Milan Prison which allow some
inmates to work outside the
penitentiary. Godtle says he
Sdoes not believe that theory.

'atur ay

rfraif iti

SATURDAY AFTERNOONS AT 5:00 P.M.
WCBN-FM 89.5 STEREO

INTRODUCTION TO
SH Sa - -l-*ad-~ l

PA

111,

f

11

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