P 1 3rd HIT WEEK! DIAL 8-6416 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-9354 ar4c Sft~iian atty second front page "CONSTITUTES MORE OF AN EXPERIENCE THAN A SHOWI" Sunday, April 13, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three U' recruits black apprentices By SAM DAMREN The University's skilled trades apprenticeship program, which has turned to giving priority to black applicants, is making a small but successful beginning. Of the twelve applicants taken since the new policy began ear- ly this semester, seven have been blacks. Of the previous 35 who had been in the program, only one was black. "This is a substantial and posi- tive increase," says Clyde Briggs, manager of counseling and training in the apprenticeship program. Applicants are being taken from University personnel and Washtenaw County. The University has undertak- en to recruit more blacks for the skilled trades program in reac- tion to the discriminatory poli- cies of the trades unions which have kept black skilled trades- men to less than one half of one per cent of the total in some trades in Washtenaw County. The University's program was criticized in the past as well be- cause the selection procedure was based on tests which exhib- ited unavoidable cultural biases. During the last six months the program stopped using any tests to select applicants - in fact, no applicants were being taken at all for a time - and is now making use of the education school's guidance and counsel- ing laboratory to aid it in se- lecting and counseling appli- cants. A committee of plant depart- ment personnel and housing of- ficials reviews and recommends candidates to plant department officials who make the final de- cisions. The decisions are bas- ed on those recommendations and the policy of black priority. Both the selection committee and the education school lab- oratory are concerned with "af- firmative action," says Richard Dagget, training superintendent in the personnel department and a member of the committee. "Affirmative action" is the catch-phrase of liberals in the skilled trades use to describe compensatory programs to get more blacks into the trades. However, Prof. Donald Barr, director of the guidance a n d counseling laboratory, insists the laboratory does not take part in any decisions in the se- lection of applicants. Barr says the laboratory aids in assessing t h e commitment, motivation and desire of the ap- plicant rather than their "paper and pencil intelligence." Ap- titude tests given to pro- spective applicants are only to aid the applicant and are not used in recommendations, he says. T h e training program itself began as a response to a short- age of skilled tradesmen avail- able to the University through skilled trades unions, and only attempted to train applicants for University employment. When University employes be- came unionized almost a year ago, the apprenticeship program w a s restructured to prepare trainees to receive their journ- eyman papers. Presently, the program is de- signed to graduate fifty appli- cants within four years. Apprenticeship lasts from be- tween 36 to 42 months, and is purposely structured, ssa ys Briggs, to allow trainees to progress at their own rate." Competition from high local factory wages has forced the program to recruit its own ap- prentices who throughout their apprenticeship are paid sub- stantially less than the journey- men they work under. Firebomb rips housing office in WMU union KALAMAZOO O--The student center at Western Mich- igan University firebombed early yesterday causing extensive damage to an administrative office in the building, Kalama- zoo police said. Students living in a nearby dormitory said they heard the sound of breaking glass, then saw flames. Police said a rock had been used to break a plate glass window, then a home-made firebomb was thrown through. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The burned office was identified as that of housing director Thomas Carr. Carr said all equipment in the room was destroyed, but added that the "real loss" was in the paper THE ACCLAIMED MOTION PICTURE-JohnCassav tms"FACES" :::.''M.. .i": ?$!..JC l"!!~i.: /. ' . ...:"..\i::v4; Center for Russian and East European Studies presents a lecture by ABRAHAM BRUMBERGr Editor, Problems of Communism 40 : DISSENT IN THE USSR".. TIME: 4:10 P.M., Monday, April 14 PLACE: Auditorium D, Angell Hall Mr. Brumberg has been a member of the staff of Problems 'of Communism since 1952 and its editor- in-chief since 1957. He is the author of two books and many articles on the Soviet Union, and the editor of a forthcoming volume on dissent and protest in the USSR. ~':'a'? :":ey}>":a"a*. dtR<:' $2.." ::' .o.".Erw,\ ":.xx;:: : .x:n"%:-{}::r:,£":. E}:: ~: SATURDAY and SUNDAY MONIKA dir. Ingmar Bergman Swedish 1952 Bergman's most erotic film "The most beautiful film of the most original cineastes" -Jean luc Godard SHORT: WORK Charles Chaplin 7 & 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM CONTROVERSY COOLS Harvard faculty to study issues (Continued from Page 1) much concern for the adminis- tration. The group had refused to support the original six SDS de- mands and had aligned itself with the moderates alling for restruc- turing and amnesty. Early yesterday the group an- nounced its sympathy with t h e' SDS demands and congratulated SDS for taking over the building, but then there were less than 400 persons in the crowd to hear what several days ago probably would have been considered an irrespon- sibly radical move. The memorial church group (MEM) - it h e moderate group r- -- the n"ewse today by The Associated Press and College Press Service" INTERNAL SQUABBLES as well as student and labor unrest once again threatened Italy's four-month-old government yester- day. Deeply concerned with the wave of strikes and student and labor demonstrations protesting the police's handling of a riot in Batti- paglia last Wednesday, the coalition parties are faced with conflicting demands that the police be disarmed and that they become tougher with future demonstrators. * * * CZECHOSLOVAKIAN AUTHORITIES yesterday announced that the number of Soviet troops in their country would be in- creased, but later withdrew the announcement. The withdrawal of the statement was surprising since a troop buildup had been rumored for some time. No explanation for the series of maneuvers was given by the Czechoslovakian government. CONGLOMERATE MERGERS will become increasingly dif- ficult to obtain, the Federal Trade Commission announced yester- day. In an effort to slow the pace of mergers, the FTC will not require that corporations submit notification of planned mergers involving assets valued at more than $250 million 60 days in advance. In addition, the acquisition by one firm of more than ten per cent of another company's stock must be similarly reported to the commission. which h a d originally called for the.strike and amnesty - suffered from internal quibbling and dis- sent. Its leadership yesterday ap- peared to be vying for the little power .that remained. SDS originally took over Uni- versity Hall demanding the imme- diate abolition of ROTC and the administration's promise not to ex- pand the University into outlying urban areas where, SDS claimed, poor families w o u l d be evicted without good prospects for equi- table relocation. Both issues remain muddled mainly because the administration - even in the wake of evidence favoring SDS-continues to main- tain the issue is "irrelevant" and .thus refuses to comment on it. Early this semester the Harvard College faculty voted to end aca- demic credit for ROTC and-in- structed the administration to be- gin re-negotiation with the mili- tary to implement the faculty consensus, Statements by President Na- than Pusey and other administra- tors incensed SDS, whose mem- bers claimed thesadministration was stalling. Pusey had been quoted as saying the process for implementation of the faculty consensus could take until Sep- tember, 1970. The administration has been ev- en more evasive concerning Har- vard expansion, playing politics with very clumsy tactics. The main controversy centers around the proposed Kennedy Memorial Library and a medical school an- nex which SDS charges will neces- sitate the demolition of more than 200 apartments in the Roxbury area of Cambridge. work, including most univer- sity housing records. WMU has recently been the scene of student unrest, with stu- dents protesting against the deci- sion-making structure concerning such matters as housing, the stu- dent newspaper, :and studet dis- cipline. Nine days ago, the demonstra- tions became violent, when ap- proximately 200 state police were called in to clear the streets of some 6,000 students who had gathered in front of the university president's house. Forty-two persons were arrested in that demonstration and 31 of them charged with unlawful as- sembly. Charges against four of the 31 will be dropped, Kalamazoo County Prosecuting Attorney Don- ald A. Burgee said Friday. t Dorm fast to aid Biafra The University and the Biafra Relief Fund have made arrange- ments allowing students who wish to skip all meals next Wednesday to contribute the cost of their food to the fund. Students living in all University housing units providing food ser- vices who wish to contribute may do so by signing their names on lists in their dorms no' later than tomorrow. For each student who signs, the University will contribute the one dollar cost of the student's raw food to the fund in the name of the student. -Assoclated Press Bombed office at WMU SEPTEMBER 16-28. SARO ) (AN'S 'a GRADUATING SENIORS: Announcements Will Be on Sale Today ) Through April 18 at the Information Desk [S & A Building * I-, Foreign Student' Escorts ' J Meet a foreign student next fall. Give your personal touch to his first experiences in the ; United States and the University of Mich- SSummer Address BRING TO SECOND FL06R UNION SINTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE, r//wiiii///irw/iw/irw// ir Another delightful APA revival of an American classic! SEPTEMBER30-OCTOBER 12 p Ghelderode's "A whiff of satanical sulphur" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleize" Directed by John Houseman l w:,: I I OCTOBER 14-26 I Gogol's I The Fill IV, op 9f Directed by Stephen Porter /, P in am n, ..,crr es i 31 -~- u N emi U I