Pag Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 30, 1971 Page Twa THE MICHiGAN DAILY Friday, July 30, 1971 COMING-SATURDAY-JULY 31 Stunning color award-winner Claude LelAuch's A MAN AND A WOMAN ANOUK AIMEE, JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT Original version: French dialogue, English subtitles) "The first time I saw this film, I was on the edge of my seat, amazed at its sheer frame-by-frame beauty, and marvelous synthesis of image and sound."-d.m. auditorium a SATURDAY 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. angell hall ONLY still only 75c the ann arbor film cooperative 10-7 MON.-SAT. Ihe Wine Shopp~e 347 Maynard St. PURVEYOR OF THE WORLD'S FINEST WINES Announcing Natural Foods * Vitamins . Books on Nutfition Natural Cosmetics . Dietectic Foods Located in KERRYTOWN-The Exciting Place To Shop for All Your Food Needs 407 N. Fifth Open Everyday Adjacent to the Farmer's Market Except Sundays BABY BOOM AFTERMATH Teaching: No vacancy WASHINGTON UP') - T h e World War II baby boom has passed through the nation's public schools, leaving in i t s wake the worst job market for teachers since the Depression.. No relief is in sight for t he next decade, according to the National Education Association (NEA), which predicts that the teacher surplus will double by 1976. Unless new jobs are created, the association said in a pri- vate memorandum to its staff,. overproduction of teachers will reach 100,000 to 150,000 an- nually. And each year 15,000 to 35,000 experienced teachers who quit teaching want to return to school jobs, officials of the edu- cation association said. The job picture is further complicated by the fact that financially pressed school dis- tricts are cutting back on pro- grams and the size of t h e i r teaching staffs. In addition pro- fessionals laid off by business and industry and turning to the field of education in search of work. "The situation is completely unlike anything we have faced since the Great Depression of the nineteen-thirties," the Re- search Department of NEA said in the memorandum. "Not only beginning teachers but persons with above-average experience and qualifications are unable even to find vacan- cies for which to apply." High school employment has also been hit, but the full im- pact of unemployment wil l probably not reach that edu- ThIS K*fKMD $1.50 &3 DWAIN STORY - country music supreme 1411 Hill st"PET M&.aS' " cational level until the mid- ninteen-seventies, the associa- tion said. The job pinch is just begin- ning to be felt at the college level. The Cooperative College Registry, originally formed to find qualified instructors, now finds its role changing - it is looking for jobs. Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher, execu- tive director of the registry, said that, of 6 139 persons with doctorates who registered for jobs, 34 per cent were still with- out work last week. Fourteen of those who found jobs are not going into teaching. "Many of these people a r e having to settle for less," said Mrs. Fisher. "They don't g e t university-level jobs and have to take jobs in junior colleges and high schools and business. In one case, a man began driv- ing a taxi rather than teach at a level below his degree," She said that the number of persons with master's degrees still seeking jobs for the start of the school year was even greater, but she had no figures available of applicants and jobs. Underscoring the bleak out- look, Syracuse University's School of Education sent the following information in a let- ter July 1 to its elementary education students: "Among our current graduat- ing class, less than half have positions for next year. It ap- pears that at least a third of our graduates will not be em- ployed come September. T h e situation among State Univer- sity of New York graduates is even worst; in June, less than 31 per cent of the Oswego, Cortland and Potsdam graduat- es had teaching positions." As examples of the tight job market in elementary schools, the Syracuse letter noted that, among area school districts, one had 400 applicants for six openings; another had m o r e than 300 applicants for each vacancy. The situation is not confined to New York or any other geo- graphical area. Throughout the United States, teachers a r e finding job openings few a n d far between. Roy Archibald, an official of the National Education Asso- ciation in California, said that he had advised friends to look for jobs in the mountains but that "they came back and said they're not hiring out the r e, either." In the past, Los Angeles has sent recruiters across the coun- try looking for teachers. Now it has a waiting list with hundreds of names. The letter from Syracuse's School of Education concluded: "Blame it on the pill or what- ever, but the cause of all this appears to be a reduction in the birth rate." "Give it some serious thought before you get so far into the program that it's impractical to change," the letter warned its elementary education students. "We are fairly certain (that) the situation that confronts us will not go away overnight." GET "WILLARD IS HERE" BRUCE DAVIDSON . ERNEST BORGNINE IN "WILAR " color THE ONE MOVIE YOU SHOULD NOT SEE ALONE 2 showings nightly at 8:30 & 12:00 GERALDINE PAGE 0 RUTH GORDON PLUS "WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO AUNT ALICE" ot NOW! AT BOTH THEATRES! "Escape from the Planet of the Ades" Starring Roddy McDowell, Kim Hunter, Bradford Dillman ALSO "THE LOST CONTINENT" AND A 3rd BONUS HIT! 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