Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 15, 1971 Page Two ~THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 15, 1971 Regents to decide on new Arboretum hours The Regents will be holding their July meeting today and tomorrow with an ordinance governing the Arboretum and the closing of the Center for Conflict Resolution to be among the major topics of discussion. Today's meeting which begins at 2 p.m. at the Administration Bldg. will be closed to the public. It is at this session that the future of the center will be decided (See story Page 3). Friday's session will be open to the public. Another important topic that appears on the agenda for this month's meeting is a discussion of the University's Willow Run airport facility. The airport has become the center of some conflict recently as a result of plans by the Wayne County Road Commis- sion to purchase the airport from the University. The commission plans to expand the facility into a major air freight facility. Residents of the area surrounding the- site have expressed strong opposition to the planned expansion charging it would be destructive to the local ecology. A citizens group from the area has petitioned the University requesting the site not be sold. No final action on the matter is expected for some time. 10-7 MON.-SAT -r 7he Wihe.5"wppe 347 Maynard St. PURVEYOR OF THE WORLD'S FINEST WINES Wenk's Sport Center Tent Sales & RENTALS Dacron 88 and Down Filled Packs CAMPING-HIKING EQUIPMENT REFLECTS ECONOMY Job market worst in years Continued from Page 1) Ph.D.'s that has been widely re- ported. According to his study, only 11 of 988 persons who received doctoral degrees from the Uni- versity between December 1969 and December 1970 are known to be unemployeed involuntarily. Ann Ransford, the law school's placement director also reports that despite predictions of a de- pressed job market for new law graduates, 70 per cent of the Uni- versity's 1971 Law School gradu- ates have already been placed in jobs with another six per cent al- ready committed to graduate DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSDAY, JULY 15 ers, Twelfth Night," Lydia Mendels- Day Calendar sohn Theatre,ae-p. Religious Affairs Film: "Convesa- General Notices tions with Paul Tillich III," First Me- thodist Church, Social Hall, state ,and CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Huron, 4 p.mt. ested students nnoMndoy and U-M Audio-Visual Education Center: Peace Corps, will interview interest- "Bsice Fl Tienasms: ad students an Monday and Tuesday, Oasic Filt Tem : A Visual Diction- 9-4 in 3520 SA. Stop in when it is ary, Cinematographer, Powers of Ten, convenient. No appts. needed. Production Manager. No. 00174, La Jetee, The Critic," UGLI Multipur- SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE pose Rm., 7-9p.m. 212 SAB Summer Concert Series: John Og- Ann;Arboropening for graduate stu- den, piano, Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. dent in Material Sciences and/or in- Michigan Repertory: University Play- organic' chemistry bckgrnd; for further dea tils contact Suts4 Placement NOTICE: 5Seic, c1a SAB, 704-7400. The Gay Liberation F r o n t or "anizauion OICS open meeting will be held on ga iationto te . Thursa-y, July 15 at 8:30 Gay LiberatlionFront a on meeing, Turryy. July 15 830 p.m a2nd aloor p.m., not Wednesday, July 14 SAB. as appeared in the July 14 issued of The Michigan Daily Ecology Center Reccling Committee iThursday July 15, 7:30 pm. Sch. of Nat. Resources, Room 2024. Serving: l11 A.M.-1 :30 at nite 1 Ham & Swiss Cheese-85c: Imported HNam, sliced thin and stacked high with Cheese Hot or Cold--and served on a hot hord roll Home-made Meatball Submarine* 95c all sandwiches served with chips and pickle 208 W. HURON y* study, fellowships or legal work in the military. Ransford notes that the 1971 figure is brighter than those of the past several years and -at- tributes the change to the fact that Michigan is a "major law school" and that "students work- ed harder trying to obtain jobs' because of gloomy predictions. Since aerospace has been one of the industries hit hardest by the nation-wide economic slow- down, graduates in engineering and related scientific areas face ,one of the worst job markets. CPC reports that job offers to bachelor's degree recipients in technical areas are down 66 per- cent from last year. compared with 48 per cent in non-technical CPC's sirvey did not inclide teaching jobs, either at colleges, or at elementary and secondary schools, but indications are the market in those areas also is down. According to figures kept by Grace Oerther, a University Placement Service counselor for recipients of masters and doc- toral degrees seeking college po- sitions, total requests for col- lege personnel throughout the nation have been cut by at least one-third since last year in al- most all fields and by one-half in: mny fteld. Requests for college personnel dropped most sharply in chemis- try, engineering, English, for- liou lanuacges, *jornalismc speech, physical educationncd social studies. In addition to economic fac- tors which are causing state leg- islatures throughout the country to cut back on appropriations to state colleges and universities, Oerther comments that another reason for this drop is that a few years ago college personnel were especially in demand when a large nurnber of new junior col- leges came into existence. Tihe hitlc,'l Daily, ceiledoandi mm- ed byscde at the University of Michigan. News phone: 704-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Sich- in. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sundayismorning Univer- sity year. Sascrptis +c so10 0; caiert, $10hy mil. SomehSesiontu lihd Tusday thoaugh hatsurdpyisarning. Sobscric- ti0 rates $5bycarer.byrsili. I Conversations with PAUL TIL LICH (A Film Series ) TODAY: 4:00 p.m. - Dr. Tillich dis- cusses religion and psychotherapy, his analysis of