Taylor continues HISC testimony By LYNN WEINER Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - Student Government Council member Brad Taylor finished tes- timony yesterday before a congressional committee investigating an anti-war con- ference held in Ann Arbor last February. Taylor told the House Internal Security Committee that actions among participants in the Student and Youth Conference for a People's Peace, resulted in much dis- sension and controversy. The conference, which met Feb. 5-7, discussed the People's Peace Treaty, a major platform of the anti-war demon- strations which took place here this spring. The security committee is hearing testi- mony on "the radical nature and sub- versive involvement" of the National Peace Action Coalition and the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice, groups involved in the protest. Taylor, who first appeared before the committee Tuesday, said yesterday that division in the conference apparently was caused by differing support for the peace march April 24 and the more militant ac- tivities of May. Taylor identified the Students for a Democratic Society, the Progressive La- bor Party, and the White Panther Party as among the groups which disrupted the conference. He also told the committee that black nationalist Robert Williams, who had just returned from China, was "heavily booed" when he spoke in favor of the April 24 march. Williams is currently a research asso- ciate at the University's Center for Chinese Studies. Taylor introduced numerous leaflets, photographs and agendas as evidence, and at one point was cautioned by Committee Chairman Richard Ichord (D.-Mo. about the "large volume of materials" he was submitting. Taylor produced a photograph of May- day demonstration leader Rennie Davis speaking to peace activist John Froines and testified that Davis told the crowd to attend the May protests. He thep related how an unidentified man. See TAYLOR, Page I Brad Tavylor Vol LXXXI, No. 46-S Ann Arbor, Michigan--Thursday, July 15, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages State Legislature votes to lower majority Assails Nixon, AMA Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on administrative practice, yesterday attacked President Nixon and the American Medical Association for "a marriage of inconvenience against the public interest" in health care. SCIENCE HIT HARD: College graduates face worst employment crisis in 20 years By JIM IRWIN months, some college placement lated reports that Ph. D. re- The job market this year for directors say. cipients have been having in- college graduates is probably the But at present, a large number creasing difficulty finding em- age toi, Law allows drinking, making legal contract By JONATHAN MILLER Special To The Daily LANSING -- The Michigan State Senate yesterday passed and sent to the Governor a bill lowering the State's age of majority to 18. The bill will allow Michigan's more than 500,000 18 to 21-year-olds the right to buy alcohol, to enter into legal contracts, to sue and be sued, and most other rights now reserved to those 21 and over. The legislation, however, does not affect constitutional pro-" visions restricting eligibility for public office to those over 21. n The Senate passed the bill - which had been approved by " " the House in May - by an overwhelming 32 to 4 margin Pditions and sent it to Governor William Milliken, who said he expect- " ed to sign the bill shortly. The nmcasure wvilt take eftect o i January 1, 1972.'Special to The Daiy The bill's sponsor, Rep. Mich- LANSING - Supporters of said lstnighttR-T aprovfCity Michigan's stalled abortion bill the legislation indicated t h decided at emergency stratgy Senate held "a great deal of meeting here yesterday to mount faith in young people." a massive petition drive aimed at He attributed the ease by placing the issue before the elec- which the bill passed its final torate in the 1972 general elec- hurdle into law to the ratifica- tion. tion two weeks ago of the 26th Sen. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann amendment to the U.S. Consti- Arbor) told The Daily yesterday tution which gave young peo- that hundreds of volunteer work- ple between eighteen and twen- era will soon begin to collect the ty-one the vote in all elections. 250.000 signatures iequired to The bill's co-sponsor Jackie place an abortion reform bill di- Vaughn (D-Detroit) said that rectly before the voters. the bill "completes what t h e Bursley expressed confidence towering of the voting age be- that both the necessary signs- gan. tures could be gathered and the "The measure makes first class issues successfully resolved at citizens out of young people," the polls. he said, and indicated he would Last month, the senator's abor- soon introduce a measure to Lion bill failed to pass the State lower the age of eligibility for House of Representatives after public office also.- victory in the Senate. Opposition to the bill on the Though the abortion bill before floor of the Senate yesterday the House is likely to come up for centered on the lowering of the another vote in the fall, Bursley drinking age to 18. expressed pessimism that the Sens. Robert Richardson (R- House would pass the measure. Saginaw) and Donald Bishop "But I've worked at this too (R-Rochester) both spoke long and too hard to give up strongly against the measure, now," said Bursley. which they said, would lead to "I'm going to carry the fight an increase in traffic deaths right to the end and I am con- and drunkenness among young fident of success," he said, ex- people. plaining that polls conducted re- Their amendment, designed to cently in 25 legislative districts remove the provision lowering showed public support for the the drinking age, was stymied measure. See STATE, Page 6 See BURSLEY, Pgge 6 t worst in at least two decades, but it will probably start showing signs of improvement next year, say officials of the College Placement Council (CPC?. "It's likely that we have bot- tomed out," says Robert Her- rick, executive director of the council, which works with about 1,200 four-year colleges and 2,000 employers in business and gov- ernment. "We expect slow, steady im- provement," he adds. Companies are reporting signs of an upturn in the nation's econ- omy which may increase their hiring ability in the next few of college graduates, including those with master's and Ph.D's in practically every field face dim prospects for finding work they are trained for. CPC reported that a survey it conducted of 800 employers in business, government, and non- profit organizations revealed that employers have hired, or plan to hire, between 27 and 28 per cent fewer graduates than last year -generally considered an "off" year. CPC's survey of the employ- ment picture for Ph.D's turned up results that seemed incon- gruous in view of widely circu- ployment. In fact, the unemployment rate for Ph.D.'s appears to be drop- ping. Employers, surveyed in late spring, indicated that there were only 19 per cent fewer openings for Ph.D.'s than at the same time last year. A study in December, 1969 had shown there were 43 per cent fewer openings than a year before. Data collected by George Hay, associate dean of the Graduate School and professor of mathe- matics, casts further doubt on the gloomy picture for'holders of See JOB, Page 2