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June 07, 1980 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1980-06-07

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Page 6-Saturday, June 7, 1980-The Michigan Daily
New plan
QNburd IttZIh14t 'EVliEttn needed to

4

CHURCH OF CHRIST
530 W. Stadium
(Across from Pioneer High)
Schedule of Services:
Sunday-Bible School 9:30 a.m.
Worship-10:30 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday-Bible Study 7:30 p.m.
Bible classes for College Students.
For information call 971-7925
Wilburn C. Hill, Evangelist
Transportation-662-9928
* * * -
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.-662-4466
(between S. Univ. and Hill)
Campus Ministry Program
eampus Minister-Carl Badger
Worship Services-Sunday at 9:30
a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP-Sunday,
6:30 p.m., Vance Room.
* * *
CANTERBURY LOFT
Episcopal Campus Ministry
332 S. State St.
Rev. Andrew Foster, Chaplain
SUNDAY COMMUNITY EVENTS
AT ST. ANDREWS CHURCH
306 N. Division
9:00 a.m.-University Study Group.
10:00 a.m.-Worship Service with the
Parish.
12 noon-Luncheon and Student Fel-
lowship.

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
120 S. State St.
(Corner of State and Huron)
Worship Schedule:
8:30 a.m.-Holy Communion in the
Chapel.
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Morning Wor-
ship in the Sanctuary.
Church School for All Ages-9:30
a.m. and 11 a.m.
Choir Rehearsal Thursday-7:15
p.m.
Ministers:
Dr. Donald B. Strobe
Rev. Fred B. Maitland
Dr. Gerald R. Parker
Education Director: Rose McLean
Education Asst.: Anne Vesey
* * *
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw Ave.
Fellowship Supported by the
Christian Reformed Church
Clay Libolt
10:00 a.m.-Morning Service.
6:00 ptm.-Evening Service.
* * *
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
Serving the Campus for LC-MS
Rovert Kavasch, Pastor
1511 Washtenaw Ave.
663-5560
Sunday Service at 9:00 a.m.

LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(The Campus Ministry of the ALC-LCA)
Gordon Ward, Pastor
801 S. Forest at Hill St.
10:30 a.m.-Worship Service.
Wednesdays, 7:00 p.m.-Choir Prac-
tice.
* * *
ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL
(Catholic)
331 Thompson-663-0557
Weekly Masses:
Mon.-Wed.-5:10 p.m.
Thurs. and Fri.-12:10 p.m.
Saturday-7:00 p.m.
Sunday-7:30 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30
a.m., noon.
North Campus Mass-9:30 a.m. at
Bursley Hall, West Cafeteria.
Rite of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5 p.m.
on Friday only; any other time by
appointment.
* * *
AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS
CENTER at FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
502 E. Huron St. (between State &
Division)-663-9376
Dr. Jitsuo Morikawa, Minister
10:00 a.m.-Worship Service.
11:15 a.m.-i) A college class for both
faculty and students, led by Dr. Nadean
Bishop.
2) An undergradaute campus class
for students only, a discussion with
three students as leaders.
NEWPORT FELLOWSHIP
(Free Methodist Church)
1951 Newport Road-665-6100
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Worship-11:00 a.m.
(Nursery and Children's Worship).
Evening Worship-6:00 p.m.
Robert Henning, Pastor, 663-9526
* * *
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
Huron Valley Mission
809 Henry St.
668-6113
Sunday Service-2:30 p.m.
Rev. Marian K. Kuhns

PUT EM AWAY
If you can live without
your cigarettes for one
day you might find you
can live without them
forever
__JUST FOR A DAY. _

avoid race
eonfliets,
profs say
(Continued from Pagei5)
ticipants' actions are toward specific
targets. They tear down white-owned
businesses rather than black-owned
businesses."
There is a possibility that riots will be
increasingly utilized as an organized
tactic for social protest, Morris said. He
explained that society absorbs peaceful
protest and does nothing about it. Riots,
on the other hand, could become
"another tool added to the repertoire
because they're not predictable,"
Morris cautioned.
Brabson said the only relationship he
saw between racial tensions in Natchez,
La. - where unrest erupted May 29 in
the wake of the investigation of the
alleged shooting of a black .man by a
white woman - and the Miami riotbwas
economic.
HE EXPLAINED that white hostility
toward blacks increases as they com-
pete for increasingly limited resources,
such as jobs. "This happens to the up-
per-middle class as well as the lower-
class," he said. "The 'liberal' slips
from his left-wing stance more to the
right-wing as competition increases."
Morris agreed, saying the civil rights
movement of the '60s died when blacks
began to address economic issues. Mar-
tin Luther King, Jr., he said, was
assassinated because of this.
The government, meanwhile, is "tur-
ning its back" on hostilities aimed at
blacks, Brabson said. Although the
popularity of groups like the Ku Klux
Klan is on the upswing, he said, blacks
will not be passive to their terror tac-
tics, but will retaliate.
"THE GOVERNMENT must devisea
strategy for totally meshing blacks into
the economic cycle," Brabson said.
"They must also provide adequate
social mechanisms that will be respon-
sive and responsible for controlling
white hostilities toward blacks.
Unless this happens, violent protests
will not only increase, but will spread
out of black communities and into the
white suburbs."
David Gordn, a lecturer in the
political science department, said he
does not predict violent protests will
erupt in Detroit this summer. He ex-
plained the relationship between the
black community and the police depar-
tment there is calm. "The relationship
isn't as hostile as in Miami," he said.
"The racial situation is much better in
Detroit, and the black political par-
ticipation is much higher."
Brabson disagreed, calling Detroit a
hotbed of potential racial unrest.
"Mayor Coleman Young says he can
control it," he said, "but a political in-
cident could trigger a riot similar to the
one in Miami."

4

4

4

4

4

"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25

4

The above question is asked by God Almighty Himself
in the second Psalm of His Book, the Bible. Do you ask
God to bless you? In the first Psalm He says the man is
blessed that departs from evil in his walk, his stand, his
sitting, and "his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in
His law doth he meditate day and night." Have we a right
to be heard and blessed on account of our efforts to meet
and fulfill these conditions?
In John 6:44, etc. Jesus said "No man can come to me,
except the Father which hath sent me draw him --- And
they shall all be taught of God. Every man therefore that
hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto
me." Have we put ourselves in position to be "taught of
God" by searching the Scriptures and meditating on His
Word? It appears we are always "passing the buck" to the
Almighty while in reality His Word "passes it to us!" The
law is our school-master to bring us to Christ..
The reason our churches are so full of "dead wood and
excess baggage" of folks who don't know what is is to be
convicted of sin and made to see their lost condition by
the power of the Holy Spirit, is that they are drawn into the
church and to Christ, as they think, by the precepts of
men, the devices and wiles of the devil, and not by the
school-master so "teaching them of the Father" that they
are drawn by His power to the Son!
In the second Psalm there is the opposite picture of the

"Blessed Man." It shows us men raging and rebelling
against God, and His Anointed, in order to break the
bands and cast away the cords of His "Thou shalt nots,"
His Moral Law and Ten Commandments. So, instead of
being blessed men and nations we have God's curse
poured out upon us; His laughter and derision, His wrath
and displeasure that sorely vexes mankind.
We blame this man and that, this nation and that, but
according to God's message here the blame lies at the
root of all who refuse to depart from evil but choose to
rage against The Almighty. Read Luke 13: 1-5, and make
the application. Elijah, the man taken to heaven without
dying, by-passing the grave, said to King Ahab: "I have
not troubled Israel, but thou, and thy father's house, in
that ye have forsaken the Commandments of God.. ." 1st
Kings 18:18.
"When the mists have rolled away, and we know as we
are known," see if the reason American is now "riding
upon the high places of the earth" is not because our
fathers up to about 1920 honored God by a more or less
strict observance of The Lord's Day, and we are enjoying
the fulfillment of the above promise. However, we are now
wasting and dissipating our rich heritage, "riding for a
fall," and "great will be that fall" unless we repent and
"bring forth fruit for repentance."

I
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P.O. BOX 40D5ECATUR., GEORGIA J$1

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