Page Ten THE MCHIGAN DAI.Y CG'c& k1!ori, £enoice4 Saturday, May 15, 1976 Reagan h #it iry tral FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH State at Huron and Washington Worship Services: 9:30 a.m.-Communion Service -Chapel. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Warship Service-Sanctuary. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.- Church School. U.M.Y.F. Contemporary Serv- ice 'Lightshine-" Worship Services are broad- cast over WNRS-AM (1290) each Sunday from 11:00-12:00 noon. BETHLEHEM UNITED ChURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Orval L. E. Wiimann 9:00 a.m.-Chapel Service. 10:00 am.-Worship Service. 10:00 am.-Church School. Child care at 10:00 a.m. serv- ice, Service broadcast on WNRS. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 am.-Church School. 10:30 am.-Morning Worship. UNIVERSITY LUTIHERAN CHAPEl. (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday morning workship at 9:30. Sunday Bible study at 10:45. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Fermerly Lutheran Student Chapel) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St. Sunday Service at 10:30 a.m. ** * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister Students Welcome. For information or transpor- tion: 663-3233 or 662-2494. 10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. CAMPUS CHAPEL-a place for people 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Pastor: Dn Postema 10:15 a.m.-Morning Worship --Call to Celebration." 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekend Masses: Saturday -S 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). 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. Midweek Informal Worship. Reading Room - 306 E. Lib- erty, 10-6 Monday and Friday; 10-5 all other days; closed Sun- days. ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadiff Blvd. (ore black west of U of M Stadium) Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 am.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship--Sunday, 10:30 am. and 6:90 p.m. Need Transportation? C a l I 662-9926. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 40 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-41:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal) 218 N. Division-663-0606 Sundays at noon-Holy Eucha- rist with a meal following. Guest-in-Residence - Rev. Dr. Jeannette Piccard. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH' 1432 Washtenaw-662-466 Worship - Sunday, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Young Adult meals-Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, 6:00 p.m. ($1.00). Study and discussion- 11:00 a.m. S u n d a y: Adult study. 12:00-1:00 Thursday: Thursday Forum (lunch, $1.25), Chancel C h o i r - 7:00-8:30 Thursday. For more information about the Young Adult Program call Jo Ann Staebler at the church, 662-4466. o - a - U/) C . o 0 V"3 (Continued trom Page 1 Today the automobile and the men and women who make it .are under constant personal attack from Washington," he told the motor city audience. Reagan went on to condemn the energy bill signed by Presi- dent Ford last December, claim- ing that the bill would force Detroit to build smaller cars "no matter whether anyone wants them." HE BLAMED the Federal En- ergy Administration (F E Ay bureaucracy for the rise in gaso- line prices, and called for the abolishment of that agency. He also criticized the welfare system, stating that "able-bodied welfare recipients should work on community projects in return for their welfare payments." Reagan told his audience that the American people are "hun- gry for a spiritual revival," and said that he hoped his election would put "God back in' the classroom." Campaign '76 {Continued from Pages)S Jerry Ford is already Presi- dent. His toothpaste is already in the john at the White House, but incumbency doesn't mean as much this year as it has in others. Nobody ever cast their lot with Ford outside Grand Rapids except Richard Nixon before New Hampshire, and he's had to sweat out primary nights with the least promising of the Democrats. When you have GOP backing, as GOP presidents usually do, you hit a lot of big fund-raising dinners where wealthy Repub- licans listen to you talk about prosperity. They eat it up right with the mass-banquet fried chicken and fruit cocktail, and cheer madly for four more years of the same. But at such a fund- raiser at Cobo Hall in Detroit last October, when the political oven was just starting to really heat up, Ford could hardly mus- ter a squeal. The conspicuous presence of heavyweight Mich- igan Republicans like Robert Griffin, William Milliken, and Marvin Esch - typical symbols of support for an incumbent - just couldn't turn the trick. Ford couldn't campaign like an in- cumbent because nobody saw him as one, so he went up to New Hampshire and started act- ing like he wasn't one. RONALD REAGAN started throwing snowballs at photog- raphers-a terrific "photo op- portunity," as if Reagan didn't know it-long before the Presi- dent arrived, and the former movie actor had the jump on him. Reagan is smooth as silk on glass with whatever group wants to l i s t en, and in New Hampshire there were plenty who did. With campaign staffers at his Manchester headquarters he was all Hollywood, a humble smile gracing the handsome fea- tures which looked fifteen years youngers than the sixty-five they really were. He only had to be courteous, calm, and grateful with these people. They were already in the bag. But at an elementary school gymnas- ium rally in the conservative farming town of Candia, he was out to persuade, and he let Recipe #456. 78cR THE TAXCo Fizz: *2 oz. Jose Cuervo'Tequila * Juice from one lime (or 2 tbsp.) * 1 tsp. sugar * 2 dashes orange bitters * White of one egg * A glass is quite helpful, too, C A JOSE CUFFRV0*TE-QUH.A RU PROOF. 1AfIpGR A AND 80ViL54 ISY 9147$. HUWA E61N, ING,, HM-afQKD Q*Wfi -.-- loose with all the home-spun charm and Cold War talk he could summon up - a curious mixture. After Nancy, a born politician, selected a carnation from the bouquet presented by the 11- year-old Homecoming queen and pinned it on her husband's lapel, he introduced his buddy from Hollywood, actor Lloyd Nolan, with the statement, "Lloyd and I go back to the days when the Communists were trying to take over our industry and we fought the good fight together." The line scored in Candia, but Rea- gan wouldn't have dared use it an hour before at a college rally in Manchester. On the campaign trail, one gets accustomed to a few surprises. AFTER SOME kid pointed a toy gun at him just six hours after he said he wanted to be President in November, Reagan and his wife were particularly paranoid, understandably, in the crashing crowds of the cam- naign. The night of the New Hamoshire primary, when Rea- gan left for his quarters think- ing he had won, he and his wife made their reluctant way through the crowd with smiles frozen on their glazed features. The Secret Servicemen, out of their minds with tension and fear, packed around the candi- date and shouted at a Daily re- porter and others to "Get your hands- out of your pockets! C'mon, c'mon, o u t of the pockets;" Reagan made it to his room but he didn't win the primary. Which one did he think was more important? Perhaps the m o s t tireless handshaker and how-ya-doiner of them all is a man who admits at once shaking the hand of a department store mannequin - Jimmy Carter. Yes, the smile is stunning, but his way with the crowd is not particularly warn. The glaring grin is absolutely constant. Reagan's, at least, shifts in intensity. The man on Carter's heels in Michigan is Morris Udall, who stands half a head above every- body else in a mass of support- ers-a situation not particularly popular with the Secret Service. You can spot Mo in a crowd from a quarter-mile away. Presidents have to be liked by everybody, and no candidate misses the chance to be caught on film being liked. Even Udall, a man who claims to have made his campaign on the issues alone, is loathe to let the oppor- tunity pass. When he was in Ann Arbor a week ago he played a little two-on-two basketball with Wolverines Rickey Green, Way- man Britt, and John Robinson: when the game was over and the three began to drift away from the candidate's side, Udall shot out a pair of long arms and insisted, "Hey, let's get a pic- ture, let's get a picture!" and grabbed the three around the shoulders and grinned. The cameras flashed. Count the number of flashes for each candidate, and in January, watch the one with fhe most. SUMMER BEIT MIDRASH BASIC JUDAISM: Mon. & Tues. 7:00-8:30 JEWISH LITERATURE THROUGH THE AGES: Mon. 8:30-10:00 ANCIENT JEWISH HISTORY: (time to be arranged, cail the office) MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT: Thurs. 7:00-8:00 READINGS IN THE BIBLE: Thurs. 6:00-9:00 Classes begin Monday, May 17 Register at First Class Meeting or call HILLEL, 663-3336 B'noi Brith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St,