Thursday, August 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .Pc Nine Thurday Aug st 5, 968 HE ICHI AN AIL Pnnp N mni i 9F. Inner city residents trained in U'-administered program 'U' union ask mediation board to send representative to speed contract talks 1 , .. I DETROIT - Thousands of De- troit's inner city residents are re- .ceiving specialized gtaining in a * program administered by the Uni- vergity Center for Adult Educa- tion. The Detroit Area Training and Technical Assistance Center (ATTAC) connects the academic, worl4 to the inner city, according to D'. Robert Smith, associate director of the UCAE. Seventy- five percent of the 15,706 persons trained by ATTAC since its incep- tion in 1965-and 85 per cent of its staff-are Negroes. Funded by 'the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity, ATTAC pro- vides training for the professional and subprofessional staff members of the Mayor's Committee for Human Resources Development (Detroit's anti-poverty program), and is delegate agencies and local community action throughout Michigan. According to Gilbert programs tunity to assist teachers repre- sents their first real job.I A it ff- - A. Mad- dox, director of ATTAC, most of the persons who have completed training programs have been suc- cessful in holding jobs in com- munity service and action pro- grams. Four hundred teacher aides who will be serving in the Detroit public schools this fall complet- ed what is believed to be the largest training program of its kind ever held. A- total of 30,- 600 man-hours of training was provided the aides, all employees of the Great Cities School Im-: provement Project. The aides will assist classroom teachers and provide a new line of communication between the schools. and communities. Many of them were formerly on the city's welfare roles. For a ,arge number of the women the oppor- A senior aide training program was offered by UCAE this month. The objectives were to aid the senior citizen trainees in develop- ing sensitivity and human rela- tions skills, in learning how to conduct interviews, and in acquir- ing basic writing skills. The parti- cipants also learned about t h e culture of poverty. Last year ATTAC's enrollment was 10,282. Typical ATTAC course offerings are conditions of poverty and its effect on people, legisla- tion to help poor people, counsel- ing and interviewing, community organization, child development and adolescent psychology, con- sumer education, leadership train- ing, personnel management and effective supervision, personnel and program evaluation, and co- operative and economic develop- ment. Persons eligible for ATTAC training include professional, non- professional, and clerical workers in community action or human re- sources development programs; teacher aides; members of Com- munity Action Program (CAP) boards and related anti-poverty programs; personnel of city de- partments who work primarily with inner-city youth and adults; and staff members of educational institutions. ATTAC has also been success- ful with experimental sensitizing of affluent groups from the sub- urbs to the conditions and effects of poverty. A number of human relations councils in outlying areas have come to the center for training. The training has proved valuable for significant contributions to the anti-poverty effort. The State Labor MediationI Board has been requested by both University and union negotiators to send a representative to expe- dite the writing of the University's first collective bargaining agree- ment. In separate but mutually agreed upon moves, both the University and Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) wrote to state mediator Edmond Philips asking him to help speed up the fourteen-week-old talks. No answer' has been received yet. No one could say as of yester- ,day how soon the mediator could be included in the sessions, two of which were scheduled this week. Neither Philips nor Hy Parker, chief negotiator for the state board, could be reached for :omment. However, University negotiator Russell Reister noted the board is somewhat tied down now with threats of teachers' strikes that are receiving priority attention. Union and University officials differ sharply on the current status of the negotiations. Reister and James Brinkerhoff, chairman of the University labor p o l i c y committee, have termed them "progressive." "I think the last few meetings have shown progress," said Reist- er. "That applies to negotiations with all three unions." He referred to contract talks with the skilled tradesmen and operating en- gineers as well as AFSCME. But Tom Fitzpatrick, chief ne- gotiator for AFSCME, charged "absolutely no progress is being made." "We're just throwing p a p e r across the table at each other. We've had enough," he added. i in charge of management-employe and union relations for the Uni-I The state labor board has been andsity unntrelatonsforthe Uni- asked to intercede only once be- versity, sent a letter to the same fore in University-union negotia- effect. tions. Spokesmen for both sides As a result of a recent decision said that the mediator, Philips, by rank-and-file AFSCME mem- significantly expedited the talks. bers a strike vote is being con- Union recognition by the Uni- ducted by mail. The results will versity for the purpose of collec- be announced by Sept. 10. tive bargaining was granted last Fitzpatrick said a positive vote year after a walk-out by plant on the issue would not require the workers at the start of the fall union to lead a strike, which is term. Fitzpatrick said the union, against state law, but r a t h e r which first requested the media- would "authorize the officers to tion, telegraphed the state labor take whatever action necessary board last Friday. James Thiery, up to and including a strike." DON'T WRITE HOME ! Send 764-0058 CA~ ~ UNION-L EAGUE - i * Columbia faculty t o, study possible acadenmiic ref orms C -2 Faculty members at Columbia University will meet Sept. 12 to consider reforms in an effort to head off potential disruptions when students' return for the fall term; The meeting will preceed the opening of classes by t w o weeks. The first university-wide faculty meeting in the 214 year history of 4 the school was called by the' fac- ulty's executive committee, creat- ed last spring after a student up- rising threw the school into chaos. At t h a t time, occupation of many university buildings by stu- dents demanding a larger role in the school's debision making /f process resulted in clashes with police and mass arrests. One-year suspensions were given to 73 stu- dents and more than 700 others face criminal prosecution as a re- sult of the demonstration. sity at which faculty and students alike feel that their voices a r e heard, and that disorder is not a pre-condition to meaningful par- ticipation," said Michael Sovern, a law professor who is chairman of the committee. The Sept. 12 meeting is the last possible moment to give concrete evidence of this before our stu- dents return," he added. The meeting will also hear an address by Dr. Andrew W. Cord- ier, who has been named acting president on the retirement of Dr. Grayson Kirk. __ .. . . 4' .. _. I The faculty executive committee was charged by t he university trustees last spring to study and recommend changes in the basic university structure. It called for the faculty meeting in order to make specific proposals to the 800 faculty members and receive their approval on submission of pro- posals to the trustees, who must ultimately approve all changes. The specific proposals will con- cern the fate of those students suspended and facing criminal prosecution, and reformation of Columbia's policy-making process- es to give faculty and students a greater voice. 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