' IX THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 5, 1969 Poge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 5, 1969 Ire C1lJJ I td J'r~'>-, 'A nt lU A loll ii~ pubLic (Ienivnst iii 1101 ,.> a id ni the.> I his past week ox ~lic to> that Negro leaders t ia \ iJO making Pt)gi~O55 at t lie coti - I ereilce t able vii 12101 r deniat id 01 more skilled j ohs for laek> in t he buildii ic I iade>. Iii Chicago, Mmtvoi' hicinit'd J I laley has Npressed cixtideice nat all acce~ a able ''Chicago Pla ii xvonld etnergt: hoot eon I '101100 aInot ig leaders of the (.'oalit jot i br tiit~(i Cotninut iii x' :XctEOl, iii' onions am.i We build- I )aley. xxi 10 1 ni> a long record Li oil ice. is presiding over hose iiCetiligY. (hi '1.11 Orsday but Ii ~i(l('5 i'aclied 10111 at ire ag reQ 111(011 Oil a 1)1411 br the snuc- I lilt' ol a OutilOtit tee t( 1 OverSee raililild oh Negroes. lloxvox'er, iii Los A nacle., a 110 to be a I an impasse The Cs. Deixi rtmei it vi I .a bor. recur lizilig I lie ~ ia tool oxide xliiiie' 1521011 (11 1 lie problem>, is '1 Ol)l)iti~I iii .1 has (Ieoi(led on 1)111)110 hiOilViIiOS iii 111110 nialor cii ies~ooc alreatil has been neid in hicago ad xill tpres ft)'ot >0111 axil ll 111of the so7 called..( ilade phill. / ( I _ "lpl0 (I 1 964oten o'1 lolio! y hing goals i'ti illed'! 10 la. > ickts>xvrnedover al precauti,,ot for sale!ty of the 1i)o' e o i k g i n g . , actioln from wh 1 ite skille d trades- ;en, before leade~rs or:the op- pu ~gfativAe oudagree on T~ie('olit on.for(Ionllnlunitv Ac ina i maIgniof civil rights roups dmanedthat oi~e1 hid ofthe hicao'ara 's 10,000:o1s!ilct l)bsbe al- aOt ll:3,000 N tgr;ocslare 1em- Boye, in1co7sutteion jobs. 'thee igo'.tition meetings. ei ~ing n wakout byCoali- io~n rpeexaiv eutdin anl ilndusrrvunilon offer of 2,000 jobs 101 (tuitled Negr'oes and nilrniohi~ r on-the-job rai thg for .000 ore. The oaliion urned it, down because:it. r :')(>:d only minor- ity;e: otaii forthe Coali- ion i the dm1in ,,-isation of the for Uinioni and contract ors' repre- sentatives walked out when tho Coalition proposed a short. ap- prenticeship plan under Coali- tion control. And white construction work- ers controlled the Chicago hear- in gs on job discrimination against Negroes, called by Amr- thur A. Fletcher, assistant see- retary of labor, in late Septem- ber. By the hundreds, onion crafts- nien blocked the entrance to the federal building, overfilled the hearing room, jostled and even roughed up Negroes trying to get in, The hearing had to be postponed a day and moved to another site. After two days of hearings, Fletcher said that. if Chicago doesn't come tip with an ac- ceptable plan, he would try to tap a federal appropriation to set up a joint government-Coali- tion training and employment p~rogram. Philadelphia, too, has run the gamut--demonistratiotns by Ne- groes forcing a two-day stop)- page of 10 major construction projects, counter - demonstra- tions and counter-demands by white workers, and conferences that broke off iii deadlock. Black leaders hint. that the talks may resume. Negro militant. ini Philadel- phia walked out, protesting that although the population is 23 per cent black, only 212 Negroes are among the 27,000 skilled tradesmen in the area. White construction workers stormed Pittsburgh's City Hall, demanding $9.3 million conpen- sation for wages lost during the shutdowns. Conferences among represen- tatives of the Construction Coa- lition, the builders and the un- ions got. nowhere. Industry and union spokesmen rejected~ Ne- groes' demands for 2,500 more jobs in three to five years, and last. week broke off negotiations. In Los Angeles black spokes- men, threatening picketing, black workers? nave refused to accept the Com- munity Redevelopment Agency's assurance that Negroes are get- ting jobs on city projects. Al Bailey, head of the Central Welfare Council, said, "It is, a proven fact that 13 skilled jobs have no black Americans work- ing on them in the Hoover Pro- ject, an urban renewal develop- ment near the University of Southern California." City Councilman Billy Malls, a Negro, said, "Without ques- tion there is discrimination in the building industry, and we are going to do something about it." Society of Automotive Engineers OCTOBER AMAIZEMENT RALLYE OCTOBER 12, 1969 i F IRST CAR OFF AT 1 :00 P.M. Registration Begins at 10:30 A.M. Canadian-American Instructions Pre- Registration-$3.00 CALL: 761 -8484--769-4 184-761-9646 DAY OF RALLYE-$3.50 llT o t e e r t n ' - e r i e s"M o u n ts to M a rv e lo u s C lim x " - M ich ig an D ily UN ION-LEAGUE present PROFESSIONAL THEATER PROGRAM A REPRESENTATIVE O F Thle University of Chicago's 1 .c aIl 1 It t3" t:r bx r, 1 It it in:dICactx til (I! roeti,.sie.A stuei -ad iNon> )rob!Ilot is (W ixY. Conner- idea. especi'aly I orner 1ursh ',1"W!ttii. ~~ui I 1 i~oso f uho cost 1 76,000 fox' st uheilt 5 a ouIs.l The pas 1o-1 it 'Lljxe v> iyI cp'~l'~ o i hns a a~n (1ks an"d !bil i y!f[x!'hin I lelen Ne! hei'.}C at d etoI1 0 ~tld~iil) llentgwalsto ffrdp1 vle, asi~endieuse bfoer ..1 ~ l o 1 ~rb iis. Z701'd- alox n 11'fiildeiin obe km 1ikIianigxvl ntb Sokiel Y,;is a in it' 1~ c a hat lie ing i -1 lint tdi- Graduate School of Business will be on campus FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1(1, 1969 (9-5) to discuss the M.B.A. and Ph.D. programs off'ered at the School. We are interested in talking to stu- dents from all departments and major fields of study. Chicago's strong faculty emphasizes teaching and research in the basic disciplines that underlie mian- a gement. Interdisciplinary work involving other areas of the University is stressed. Business studies at Chicago gain from the Uni- versity's setting in one of the world's great centers of commerce and industry: An outstanding placement program serves gradu- ates and those seeking summer inltern)ships inidway through their M.B.A. studies. I'or maore buforoiatio~o, contact: D~avid A. Gillette, Assistant Director General Placement Division 3200 Student Activities Building Special Performance of A PA's Meet A PA after with Company :. ' / 1. REFRESHMENTS SERVED performance 1 Y iv r : 1 is1 M _ 3. iI . Erajuy , a.seli._ i , 0 t w cot vert theem ai Ing - )xo n ',atop 11 XS.' 't l 1 '_C percepI11tiotiI Trliy haitrlyed th-i7 e THURSDAY OCTOBER 9 2:00 P. M. ALL TICKETS $3.00 111 1 ( epa e 1 ttllee clelax'>1 ,1l('t11- >t itic l~n am Id tolthat tebil} If it is ht .'I~eWhcbh oe. co-11-9 111)11 pw t, the 1969 cdat e cit - i occurtx'tnred xl ttm'i umgthe pi,-1 btlxiitnn of the surt' 1at1ie0111: l{)x> ~it M iI timh ie ha i !!' -' ) ly e lx TICKETS NOW AT PTP OFFICE A 0 Take Susan tyk' A N]k t V AF TUE DAY, OCT. 7th knenx3..,' Mih gonUnor', )0 P.M. 01OAL SPA^CES STILL AAIL:ABLE. .... :.:. . . ' . s ...:,. . .m...... . .. _r . r4 . .. -. . : ~ r- .:' 4 . r r. : : r. . . n Avaiablefor ut" onl e o 1f th lieav~ilable at the Qua r ry. *We meee new people * e laugh a lot *We find consolation" oWe have T.G.'s before she noes from party hopping to *We play tootball (once) N.We make money (some) *VWe solve problems *vegain pretiqe * We become sel f confident *We debate vital issues 1 " s d v i a ,1 .1 !'I r 11 i I 90 i -i .hU icr;t ,sun ._e Just drop a film cartridge into a v I, I I." _ - _ - - - -- 1 -,- -.I..:, I, I,- - /- - i, - VVV e(.1r ifn k.') c t( ok ei i i