Uncle a) m By WAYNE JOHNSON AT THE University of Michi- gan it's called "Career Placement" but most students realize they will have to grovel around for a job, any job. Af- ter all, the average college stu- dent, unless she wisely studied computer programming or truck driving, possesses few skills, none of which are in high de- mand during a recession. Only a few years ago American busi- nessess were searching for bright young men and women who could listen attentively and take good notes. Alas .. . Today, employers are interest- ed in an applicant's desire as Sam r oney, exists that respects the vast stores of knowledge held i' ithe brain of the college student. Known as "the Government", this organization always .4 a s some jobs for which gradua es and seniors are welcome to com- pete. If joining America*s .arg- est bureaucracy violates your sense of decency, don't worry. The Army, Navy, Air Forc4, etc., also have many positions and they will even train you. Government jobs used to be filled through the scores of a tedious, three hour Civil Service test given at 8:30 on Saturday morning in the basement of the Main Post Office. Such outmod- wani b) mi left as you face the sezond (as you come in) secretary g desk. To take PACE in Marc' the ap- plication must be seat to the Detroit Area Office by Febru- ary 20. The deadline for the May PACE is April 30. No fees are required to take the exam. DETROIT WILL send each ap- plicant a ticket, good for one admission and a bookle en'it- led, "Anplic-tion Forms a n d Sample Questions." ThP forms includv one Education a iI Ex- perience Qiestionnaire and fbur Qualificati.>n riefs. T ter re- quire th- vsa u it persona, inform- ation; oirtn date, social se;_-ir Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan s your Wednesday, January 29, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 The Young Girl wakes up pERHAPS, WHEN YOU ARE wan- dering around campus, you have noticed the abundance of bizarre and dysfunctional objects littering the landscape, each bearing the no- tation that it is the gift of one grad- uating class or another-dead trees, hunks of rock, benches whose seats are too narrow to sit on, and all the rest. Now you too can join the fun! As a result of the raging contro- versy over the plaque on the front of the LSA Building entitled "The Dream of a Young Girl," the LSA Stu- dent Government and various friends and associates are sponsoring a con- test for an alternative work of art which more accurately represents the aspirations of University women. Any Michigan artist (this includes out-of-state students enrolled in the University) is eligible to submit sketches and/or scale models of free- standing, solid, weather-resistant sculptures or constructions (limit: three per artist) to replace "The Dream of a Young Girl" in the hearts and minds of the University community. Wind and water ma- chines are acceptable.' ENTRIES SHOULD BE submitted to the LSA Student Government of- fice on the fourth floor of the Michi- gan Union by 5 pm Friday, March 14. Please make copies of any submis- TODAY'S STAFF: News: Glen Allerhand, Jay Levin, Pauline Lubens, Jo Marcotty, Judy Ruskin, Steve Selbst, Jeff Sorensen Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, Marnie Heyn, Mara Letica, Steve Stojic Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: Karen Kausmauski sions you wish to keep, as they can- not be returned. A jury of eight distinguished Uni- versity women will award three prizes totalling $100 for artistic ex- cellence and best expression of the dreams of women. Their decision is final. In addition, funds will be pro- vided for the construction and main- tenance of the first-prize entry on an appropriate patch of University turf. Anyone requiring further informa- tion or wishing to make t. contribu- tion to the Women's Monument fund should contact the LSA Student Gov- ernment office. Wits and cynics are certain to sneer that such an alternative art work is not worthwhile (we know bet- ter), or that we should spend the same amount of time, money, and energy producing an alternative to the plaque entitled "A Young Man's Dream" as well. We have no objec- tions, so those who are interested in reinterpreting the hopes of men should get to it. WHILE WE'RE ON the topic, it would be nice to see a bust of Dr. Martin Luther King gazing in wis- dom and compassion at the Econ Building, and a memorial to the Un- known War Protestor in front of North Hall. Iconoclasm is not the issue here. Although women do not subscribe wholesale to the dream of pater- familial domesticity, we need to af- firm that our dreams have not died; rather, they have grown to challenge this planet and take on the entire universe, --MARNIE HEYN :". Y Y Y" " Y. ">."."." . ... ..:. :{i .v." :yr,.;; "After all, the average college student, unless she wisely studied computer programming or truck driving, possesses few skills, none of which are in high demand during a recession." ? . .rv.".*.v: "r ". :t . 4 :w:;v: . v, . . J..: :" r S;. rr}:"}"ivi:'S . ,r::L;: well as her qualifying exper- ed methods were left behind nity number, membership in the ience. An interviewer for cash- with 1974. Now PACE, a ted- Communist Party, USA, mem- ier jobs at K-Mart might ask, ious, four hour Professional and bership in any organization "Are you willing to scrub toilets Administrative Career Exam, which advocated the overthrow with a toothbrush?" Unless the is being administered every few of the government and convic- applicant's eyes begin to shine months. tion of any offense against the while she nods hysterically, the Except for special agencies, law. company may decide to choose like the FBI and the CIA, all ap- Details must be provided if someone a little more flexible plicants for federal joos miist one's past is less than pure. Not for cashier. Why hire someone take PACE, even if they have only must applicants supply who isn't willing to work up taken the old test recently. Ap- such information directly to the from the bottom? plications are availa'la in the central data banks, false or Career Placement office, stack- dishonest answers are punish- "BUT ONE organization still ed on the file cabinets on your able by law as well as grounds How greedy are YOU?: Daily self-test for landlords By JEFF BAILL ants (plus 23); (c) raise your rents and start 1JOW TO PLAY: Assume you are an Ann Ar- a public campaign declaring the landlord's rights bor landlord, with several apartment build- to account for inflation (plus 53). ings near the University campus, and answer the 4. You have just been given a substantial tax following questions: break because of a new tax system. You decide 1. The University is considering a plan to to (a) pass the savings on to your tennants :uild more student housing. You decide to (a) (-54); (b) acquire more units to secure your support the plan as an innovation in low cost position as the sole dictator of rent rates (plus housing (-70 pts.); (b) band together with other 43); (c) raise the rent in order to help President landlords and start a campaign against the Ford fight inflation (plus 65). plan (plus 10); (c) organize a secret landlord 5. The banks are considering a new method of cooperative and apply direct pressure on the Re- financing, but downpayments would make it eas- gents to table the plan (plus 48). ier for students to purchase homes. (a) You 2. You collect a flat $100 from every tenant do nothing (-23). (b) You laugh at the absurdity as a damage deposit. You realize that the ten- of this question because, as a landlord, you are nants must answer a letter notifying tiem of socially and economically intertwined with the their forfeit of the assessed damage fee within local bank directors in many financial affairs. seven days after they move out. You also realize They are your friends (plus 98). (c) You laugh that most tenants never challenge a damage at the absurdity of this question, then apply pres- deposit decision. You decide to (a) figure out sure on newspapers not to print this garbage each apartment's damages and charge accord- (plus 100). ingly (-14 pts.); (b) charge each tennant a flat Score your quiz as follows: $35, with the knowledge that any challengers will Negative score to 220 - You should remain a have their money returned (plus 32); (c) add lowly tenant, doomed to follow the whims and up the damages in each apartment and then ways of your landlord. add $25 to the tab (plus 62). 220-250 -- Aspiring landlord, but you lack the 3. YOU ARE EARNING a profit which is satis- ruthlessness to gain status. factory to you. Other landlords are raising rents 250 - 300 - You have Ann Arbor landlord with no apparent increase in costs. You decide to status. Zeig Heil! (a) keep your rents the same because you be- 300-over - You should be a presidential econ- lieve in the laws of supply and demand (-63); omic adviser. (b) raise your rents because you realize that you can always fill your apartments with ten- Jeff Baill is an LSA sophomore. 'I n d, c for dismissal after appointment. To complete the forms, sev- eral decisions must be made. One area office must be chosen from thirteen as the applicant's first location choice. Naturally, even this system is rigged. The San Francisco Area Office, for example, encompasses Arizona, California and Nevada. Later, the applicant may choose Cali- fornia as a first choice in that area, but there is no guarantee a preference will be honored. Ask any enlisted man in the armed forces who joined up, op- ted for Hawaii and went to Viet- nam. JOB PREFERENCE must be noted on the forms too. A very incomlete list includes: Budgaet specialist, customs inspector, criminal or general investigat- or, personnel specialist, revenue officer, special agent (narrot- ics), and writer-editor/puhiie in- formation specialist. If none of these look exciting, consult the complete list. A student hir- ed for almost any job will re- ceive the rank of GS-5, a code tht means $8500/year. PACE is reminiscent of stand- ardized I.Q. tests given -a 11 through school except it has been greatly expanded and re- quired more effort than making simple associations. Divided in- to six equal parts, PACE is a brain teaser or a ball buster, depending not only upon your sex, but your skill with this genre of exams as well. For example, can you recognize a pattern in this list of letters? b c d b c e b c f b c g Is the next letter in this progression: b, c, h, i, or e? This simple example of qaes- tion type III in the sample bo rr- let doesn't prepare one for the difficulty of actual test progres- sions. Twenty five type Ill questions were hard enough to be very time consuming, which ca-n be bad since the ultimate PACE sin is not ans."ering all the questions. The results are computed according t3 +h num- h ber of right answn:s wit' no penalty for guessing. QUICKLY, what is 33 7964 x 4.386) divided by (97655 43_ x 11.667)? Take your time but use pencil and paper, not a calcu- lator. Done vet? Well, you bet- ter hurry, there are many more problems after this -ne and few of them look any easier. Ques- tion type VII also ind'ides "rac- tions and story pro5lems and the fifth of the multiple choices is always: E) None of twe- e.fter five minutes of intense figuring, not matching an ansvr with A) through D) doesn t inspire con- fidence. Studied a chart la elt? es- ti-on type VI asks the testee to provide missing data to hypo- thetical revenue charts but tris really only requires basic arith- metic skills. If it Ntill sounds hard, consider your competiti-n and take heart. I remember picking five straight E)'. a cer- tain impossibility. both "Quickly, what is (38.79654 x 4.368) dliv idedi by (97655.432 x 11.667)? Take your time but use pencil and paper, not a calculator. Done yet? Well, you better hurry, there are many more problems after this one and few of them look any easier."y¢1 Of course, vocabulary is in- clude in PACE as are choosing the best supporting statement, choosing the best imlication, rearranging sequences and pro'- lem solving without all the facts. A section on analogies, question type IV, proved to be the hard- est for me. In the first box we see three misshapen circles. In the second box we see two mis- shapen rectangles and a ques- tion mark, Which of the mis- shapen squares and circles lab- eled A)-E) in box three should replace the question mark? Cor- rect, one of the squares, but which one? My eyes blurred and crossed trying to spot analogies where I strongly suspected there were none. ABOUT ONE hundred people took the exam on January 18, the last date it was given. Com- pared to the tension in a final exam room, Auditorium D was calm and relaxed. A fifteen min- ute respite after the f i r s t third of the exam was the only official break, but people wan- dered in and out during the test, anyway, to examine their crib notes in the john, no loubt. All through the test I had the feeling that if John Ehrlich- man was present, his s c o r e would wipe the rest of us up immediately. That shouldn't frighten anyone interested in PACE: John Ehrlichman w a s making a b-ndle in Washington D.C. before "ea got involved with the wrong kind of friends. And remember, the federal govern- ment is an equal opportunity employer. Even Caucasion males, a notoriously unemploy- able group, have a chance. Wayne J o h n s o n is a staff writer for the Editirial Page. Letters to The Daily 'Campaign '60' pushes AquaVelva and Cer s ________________By BOB SEIDENSTEIN--- .,7,0 lop/ a r1 / j : l 1 fi / 7, I / privilege To The Daily: IT WAS WITH NO s m a l l amount of disappointment that we watched the LSA Curriculum Committee approve a polcy of credit for ROTC courses. ROTC and the military have, for the last two decades, been involvedin actions and conflicts of very dubious morality and le- gality. While the Curriculum Committee discussed moral and social issues extensively, they ultimately limited its criteria for decision to tecanical con- siderations. By refusing to let moral concerns enter seriously into the decision, Tve feel the committee played a dangerous game of moral buck-passing. The question of credit for ROTC must be attached to the role our military plays. The invasion of the Dominican Re- public and our Indochina in- volvement make us realize that our armed forces are not forces for defense. Rather, they are forces used to support personal profit and privilege worldwide. ROTC makes the military more effective. Given the uses to which our armed forces have been committed, should a more effective armed force be our goal? SOME HAVE argued that U-M ROTC recruits will change the military. We must ask: who will change whom? Taking this a step further, does the University democratize ROTC or does ROTC militarize the University. In one confirm- with these questions and con- siderations in mind, voted twelve to two, with two absten- tions to oppose ROTC credit. We hope the Governing Pa- culty of LSA will firmly resist the ROTC credit proposal when it meets to consider the matter Monday, Feb. 3. -Mark Gold LSA Student Govern- ment January 28 plaque To The Daily: MEMBERS OF THE LSA Stu- dent Government have taken a stand calling for the remov.L of two plaques from the LSA Building ("Dreams of a Young Girl" and "Dreams of a Y'-ing Man"). Depicting a vision which views women predominently as homemakers tied to hu;bands (as compared to the vision of men - free of responsi'ility - searching and seeking adven- ture), we took our position be- cause we felt these plaques to be sexist and oppressive. Students of art and art his- tory know well that the setting that surrounds a worK can be just as important as the work itself. What is the setting of the two bronze plaques? T h e s e plaques, perhaps commissioned by the state, more than likely paid for by the state, h a v e been set upon an importan state building at its main entrance, facing a busy public thorough- fare. From this setting, an in- ference can be made that these rn-I.niPa Pvr in i vl n -, , with goals expressed in s t a t e documents and law, we call for a change in the context of pre- sentation. A museum would be a far more appropriz-e place for the works. In sucn a setting, the artist's statement would clearly remain a personal one and would not be construed as an expression of state sentiment. The issue, then, is not censor- ship at all. We do not propose to deny an artist a right to ex- presspersonal opinions or to display works. We are looking for honesty. The visions expres- sed in the plaques cannot be construed as consonant with the aims of the public or the state of this time. Therefore removal an-d relocation of the plaques is ustified. We LSA-SG members under- stand the concern of people sen- sitive to the issue of censorship. We share that sensitivity while we raise these other issues. There would be no study or in- terest in art if it was felt that artistic works left no impart on society. We feel that cultural works have some impact on so- cietal attitudes. WE ALSO FEEL that no ar- tistic work exists in a political vacuum. Content or the absence of content will be affected by systematic, political and econ- omic realities. When we see the presentation of works such as the pieces dis- played on the LSA building we are angered first !ecause we see the pieces as products of an unhealthy political situation and second, because we see the niprpC .,z pruinrr nnn-amnn HERE I AM watching tele- vision when who comes on the screen but this perfectly normal looking white, middle- aged man about to use his American Express charge card to pay for what surely will be a better-than-average meal in some swank restaurant. "Remember me?" the man asks. "I ran for Vice President of the United States in 1964." He then goes on to say how his credit card can get him great dinners anywhere in the world, including upstate New York, and if you've ever been to Buffalo you know how hard a task that can be. And just in case we don't know who this pleasant ex-po- litico is, the commercial is concluded by having the name William Miller magically em- bossed on a piece of plastic. Now first of all, it is reas- suring to know that the Ameri- can Express people are taking such fine care of Mr. Miller, The company is to be com- mended for that and for bring- ing us tip to date on this Repub- lican Sargent Shriver of the 60's. BUT BEYOND THAT, Mr. Miller himself has broken an important barrier. He appears to be the first politician, ex- cept for some potato addict who servant like Miller can sell cre- dit cards just think what some of the real heavy - weights could do. Take Richard Nixon, for ex- ample. You surely must re- member him as the beady-eyed madman who used to be Presi- dent a few months ago. To meet his legal payments Nixon is thinking of writing a book, but if he really was smart he'd go down to Bob Haldeman's ex-ad agency in Los Angeles and save himself a lot of work. Besides just endorsing record- ing tape, the former fearless leader has an enormous com- mercial potential. For instance, Nixon has a 5 o'clock shadow that is legendary. Media ex- perts claims he lost the Great Debates of 1960 and therefore the Presidency because of his bristly beard. SO, IF JOHNNY BENCH and Joe Namath can get big bucks by shaving in front of the cam- eras Nixon certainly could. For now we'll leave the panty hose commercials to Namath. Nixon isn't the only one who could endorse products for money. Ronald Reagan would he a natural, and instead of having a small businessman from New Jersey do hair col- oring spots why couldn't Hu- bert Humphrey? And who was responsible for the great iob ®r~- .::C :;.:.: u \\ &\\\\ t1 I ft II~11t\11 _=-_ _ 1-