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January 13, 1973 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-01-13

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, January 13, 1973

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 13, 1973

I

'U' may include race
on job applications

Spend A Dollar
For Dinner
And Go Out With
What You Save

GALER'
JAN. 13th & 14th
2 ETCHERS
G. BR!ILLANT
J. DEBUTLER

2-6 P.M.
2208 Packmrd
(ot Rosewood)
Phone 769-6787

(Continued from Page 1)
seen, so job interviewers are
aware of each applicant's race,"
even under the present system.
Roderick Daane, University at-
torney, described the legal ques-
tion as one in which "it's diffi-
cult to know the right course."
"HEW wants to know these
figures but the results could be
used forbdiscriminatory purposes,
which would then be unlawful,"
he explained. "Nobody with a
cause would believe that the Uni-
versity's intentions in asking
such a question are benign. My
personal preference is that the
action be made optional," he con-
cluded.
"We ought to get it," declared
Allan Smith, acting University
president. "There is a need for
such information for statistical
purposes and we can control mis-
use of the data," he said.
Smith said the information
would be beneficial to the ap-
plicant's chance at being hired.
"Theoritically, no effect would
come from the use of these statis-
tics, but considering the present
mood, the effect would be bene-
ficial. Most applicants make
their race known during the ap-
economics,
disputed
(Continued from Page 1)
"This runs a lot of risks, with
the big hitters among the unions
coming up to bat in contract ne-
giationne" said Walter Heller

plication process anyway," Smith
added.
Richard Kennedy, secretary of
the University, said other options
were being considered. One in-
volves making the race question
optional. Another alternative
would make the race question
physically detachable from the
application and thus not a part
of the job reviewer's knowledge.
Kennedy also emphasized that
"the only basis (for asking a race
question on job applications) is to
provide data for a reporting
mechanism. The best applicant
for a job should get it regardless
of race," color, creed, sex or na-
tional origin."
The Regents will consider the
racial identification question
again at their January meeting.

4

AMPLE PARKING

Dinner at the Halfway can
be less than a dollar but you
don't really have to go out with
what you save..
Because we have pinball, art
prints, and frequently, live en-
tertainment on stage in addition
to a big selection of food.
the Halfway Inn

ASSOCIATION OF JEWISH GRADUATE STUDENTS

fI

invites you to a
Sunday bagels--New York Trnes
do-it-yourself folk I estivi
BRUNCH
SUNDAY, JAN. 14-11 a.m.

t1

i

r7

L

Capital cavorting
Three men take advantage of the cold weather in the nation's capital yesterday as they play hockey
on the Capitol's reflecting pool. This will be the site of different activity on Jan. 20 when demonstrators
plan a counter-inauguration of President Nixon.
State school releases pay list
(Continued from Page 1) ecutive officers. court says we have to publish it,
Brown stated last night that he "But if disclosure will clearly then we have to."
is "not yet fully decided" on the serve to help bring about equal Huebner, who also voted against
salary information issue. pay for equal work by women and The Daily's first request, could
"At the present time, I think I minorities, then that's certainly a not be reached for comment last
would vote 'no'," he said. "I am serious consideration. And if the night.
not convinced that it's a good thing
to have every guy know every "
'yAA
4-~M d h.c~ t tri H noi4 i 7

ANNOUNCING . .
A NEW LUTHERAN
SUN DAY SCHOOL
' Beginning this Sunday, Jan. 14, 9:15 a.m.
3 year olds through Grade 8
Central Campus area
Lord of Light Lutheran Church
ALL WELCOME ! 801 South Forest Avenue
(Corner of Hill Street)

'(

I

SAVE

other guy's salary in the depart-
ment."
"The public's right to know
things like this certainly has some
merit in this case," he added.
"However I'm not sure if the fact
that someone's on a state payroll
means that his name and salary
should be printed all over the
place.
"You have to balance the rights
of taxpayers with the problems
that such a move would create."
Brown suggested that the Re-
gents might agree to release the
salary information to "some ap-

gTI LU 1 M~ l M 9 P L~, SluV 1LL11C,
former chairman of the President's
* Council of Economic Advisers un-
(Continued from Page 1) seem very appreciative of her zea- der Presidents Kennedy and John-
inadequate parking facilities, stat- lous working habits. One upset son. He mentioned the Teamsters,
ing that "any parking shortages young lady ran out of a building auto workers and meat-cutters.
are due to the yearly influx of screaming when she saw that a Most observers see these nego-
30,000 student cars with only 15,000 ticket was being placed on her car. tiations as the first test of the new
University parking spaces avail- On the next block, as Ebbitt was policy.
able." dutifully writing up a ticket, the There was also varying reaction
Sitting on Captain Conn's desk is p r e v i o u s l y unnoticed driver in Congress.
a coffee cup, appropriately in- emerged from, the car and indig-
scribed with the words "Tow Away nantly informed Ebbitt that the "Controls," said. Sen. John
Zone.". car had been parked just a mo- Tower (R-Tex.) speaking for the
On a typical day, Metermaid ment ago and she hadn't even had conservatives, "can only be used
Mary Ebbitt issues 125 tickets. a chance to put money in the as a temporary policy instrument
Covering her beat efficiently, not: meter. On another occassion, an because they eventually destroy
one violation flag or ill e g a 11 y irate man simply ripped the ticket the market system of allocating re-
parked car escapes her notice, up in Ebbitt's face. sources, goods, services and in-
However, the public, does not It is also quite common for mo- come."
torists to try to persuade meter- But Sen. Walter Mondale, (D-
t maids out of issuing them a ticket. 'Minn.) a liberal, probably express-
S r 1ses at U The most frequent excuses are "the ed a more commonplace view in
meter's broken," "I was just about Congress.f
to get some change," or "the meter
After the warning, however, just expired a moment ago." "It won't work," Mondale said.
students caught a second time Despite numerous hassles from "You're going to have tremendous
face possible eviction. the public and th e who mock
Snustad says he is more in- people pressures for big increases in
terested in getting a student to her with refrains from the Beatle's wages and prices, and a big new
SLovely RitaMetermaid" Ebbitt
Vy A V ShrAhn* wave of inflation. I bet yo..'ll find

-1

ON TUITION FOR

SPEEDWRI TING SHOR THAND
AND TYPING
EVENING CLASSES
Useful to you, personally, in
school and-on the job!
Learn in just 11 weeks
SIT IN ON CLASSES MONDAY
NIGHT-NO OBLIGATION
Tuition Payments Accepted
Call Monday or come in at 5:45 p.m.
(OTHER CLASSES AVAILABLE)
Taylor Business Institute
621 E. William, Ann Arbor 769-

.1

pointed committee, or

to the ex-

Armed thefi
(ContUnuedfrom Pug. 1)
The victims involved in the
Mosher-Jordan robbery refused
to speak to any reporters.
Feldkamp claims that action
taken against students would be
minimal. "In terms of police, it
would probably be nothing. At
the dorm, it would probably be
nothing also, except a warning.

P,

U

4

quit seeing ratner than evict(
"But I'd really feel stron,
about getting the stupid kid(
who is risking other peopl
safety," he adds.

gly
out
e's

really enjoys her job. Complaints
and insults from a ticket-weary
public are simply all in a day's
work.

wavy vl 1111ialtutl. 1ULYUI M
the value of the dollar dropping on
the world market. We'll have an-
other devaluation."

COMPARE

73 CELICA "ST"

I

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DILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
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4"4:ai.; ::q:: :.I.:::..:°:n ::. .,:::;....,. .;:.."".:.c.. .,. ::"". . ":. w :.n .... ...

2 Dr. Hardtop

SATURDAY, JANUARY 13
DAY CALENDAR t
School of Education: Saturday Semi-I
nar Series, P. Slosson, "The Impact of
American Life on the American School:t
The Colonial School," SEB, 10 am.
Gymnastics: Michigan vs. Ohio State,I
Crisler, 1 pm.V
Musical Society: Mozart's "Cosi Fant
'Tutte," Canadian Opera Co., Power, 3,r
8 pm-
Wrestling: Michigan vs. Northwest-'
ern, Crisler, 3:30 pm.
Hockey: Michigan vs Denver, Coli-
seum, 8 pm.1
Music School: Rosemary Catanese,c
piano, SM Recital Hal, 8 pm. E
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT i
3200 SABt
Unusual MAT (Masters of Arts inI
Teaching) Program at U. of N.H.: for
BA graduates who are not certified forI
teaching - you would plan & run a
free school and have teaching exper.l
in a variety of settings as well asf
public schools.
WHARTON SCHOOL, U. of Pa.: Of-I
fers Master of Public Admin. Prog., Fel-
lowships up to $6,000 available, based
on need.
YALE UNIVERSITY, Dept. of Engrg.f
& applied Sci. (Physics & Chemistry):
Offering special grants to college jun-
iors who would like to gain exper. in
advanced research this summer, wide
range of projects. Stipends range from
$100-0120/wk for 11 wk period, June
11 - Aug. 24.
Married, couples interested in being
trained to become professional teach-
ing-parents in group home for youths
in trouble, apply to Bureau of Child
Research, U. of Kas.; starting salary:
$8,-12;000 plus rmlbi. trans p.
SUMMER PLACEMENT
212 SAB, 763-4117
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield
village: Openings for food service at-
tendants, ticket cashiers and grounds-
man helpers. Details availeble. Deadline
for position as guide Jan. 19.
"0" ""
JOIN
Gilbert & Sullivan ,
Come to a
MASS MEETING

Summer Intern Program in Jewish
Communal Service for '73, Chicago, Ili.:
Excellent program for social services
in hospitals, homes, rehabilitation cen-r
ters, etc. Deadline Feb. 15.
York Archaeological Trust, York,
England. Here is your opportunity to
work with an archaeological expedi-
tion during the summer; work period
runs from June 18 to September 29.
Further details and application avail.
INTERVIEW
Camp Uta-Hi-Ya, Mich.: Soc. Work
Camp will interview Friday, January
19, from 9:30 to 5. Openings include
creative arts director, campcraft spe-
cialist, waterfront, boating, also cook,
asst. cooks, maintenance help. Addi-
tional info and appls. available.
INTERVIEW
Camp Tamarack, Fresh Air Society,
Detroit: will interview here Thursday,
Jan. 18 and 25, from 9 to 5. Counse-
lors ,supervisors, specialists - water-
front, arts and crafts, nurse, kitchen
staff. Further details avail.
DEADLINEE
Final application date for the Sum-
mer Federal Service Exac is Jan., 26,
for the Marchs10 exam .This is the
last exam _ for this season.
EXPERIENCED
SKYDIVERS
UM SKYDIVING CLUB
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
16 JAN., 1973-7:30 P.M.
3532 S.A.B. BE THERE !
I __ __-_- __-

, AIR CONDITIONED, AUTOMATIC TRANS.,
POWER DISC BRAKES, RADIAL TIRES, TINTED
GLASS, HEATED REAR WINDOW, FULL INSTRU-
MENTS INCLUDING TACHOMETER, CONSOLE,
RADIO, FULLY RECLINING BUCKET SEATS
$3882
total del. price incl. tax, lic. & title
TOYOTA ANN ARBOR, Inc.
907 N. Main 769-7935

I

I

We Don't Just

I
Sale
in
Progress

z4

Publish a Newspaper,

11

" We meet new people
" We laugh a lot
" We find consolation
" We play football
" We make money (maybe)
* We solve problems
" We debate vital issues

4

{C

* We drink 5c Cokes
* We' have T.G.'sI

r

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I IF

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