Page 6-Saturday, May 6, 1978-The Michigan Daily Employment up WASHINGTON (AP) - The unem- economy, we do not expect to see ployment rate in April dropped to six unemployment continue declining at per cent for the first time since the start this rate," said William Cox, deputy of the recession, surprising government chief economist for the Commerce economists yesterday. Department. However, they said job-seekers "We are a little apprehensive that the should not expect the employment rate might go back up," Cox said. outlook to show further improvement Administration officials have not for a while. changed their forecast of a 6.2 per cent unemployment rate at the end of the THE LABOR Department said the year. unemployment rate dropped from 6.2 DURING APRIL, the proportion of per cent in March to six per cent in the working age population holding jobs April as 535,000 new jobs opened up. rose from 58.2 per cent to a record 58.4 The six per cent rate was the lowest per cent. In the early 1960s it averaged since a 5.9 per cent rate in October 1974, about 55 per cent. The working age at the start of the mid-1970s recession. population includes people who are not Unemployment peaked at 9.1 per cent employed or looking for work. in May 1975 before dropping to 7.1 per Total employment rose 535,000 in cent in April 1977 and 6.1 per cent last April to a record 93.8 million, the depar- February. tment said. Government economists said the job About 170,000 of these jobs were held situation has improved faster than they by coal miners who returned to work af- expected from looking at other ter their strike. However, coal miners economic figures. had not been counted among the unem- "BASED ON our general view of the ployed. , for the moment THE END of the strike pushed total mining employment to 893,000, the highest level in 25 years. A building boom which came after a cold, damp winter created thousands of new jobs for construction workers. The department said construction em- ployment rose by 175,000 to an all-time high of 4.2 million. Their unem- ployment rate declined from 11.3 to 9.5 per cent. The unemployment rates for some of the categories in April included: * Adult men 4.2 per cent, down from 4.5 per cent in March. * Adult women 5.8 per cent, the same as in March. * Blacks 11.8 per cent, a decline from 12.4 per cent. * Black teen-agers 35.3 per cent, down from 39 per cent. * Blue-collar workers 6.5 per cent, down from 7.1 per cent. * Vietnam-era veterans 4.5 per cent, down from five per-cent. The report showed average hourly earnings for April were $5.60, up six cents from March and 45 cents from a year earlier. Average weekly earnings increased by $2.71 over the month to $201.60. Robert Strauss, who is leading President Carter's anti-inflation program, says he is trying to get union leaders to accept cost-of-living increase rather than big wage increases. That way, workers have insurance against inflation but will not be contributing to it as much, he said. Jaywalkers in DC pay for recklessness WASHINGTON (AP) - A ticket for jay-walking? C'mon, officer. Yup. Five bucks. - NO MATTER that it was a one-way street, the traffic had passed, and it was raining buckets. "Only a fool would stand here waiting for a sign to say go," the lady pleaded. "That's not the point," the officer replied. IN A NEW, highly enforced program designed to reduce pedestrian deaths, the District of Columbia gave 1,866 little pink slips to errant walkers in the mon- th of March alone - and police say they expect to give 10,000 before the year is out. Jaywalking prevention programs exist in many cities, including Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles and St. Louis, ac- cording to the National Safety Council. But not all cities enforce their programs so vigorously. So far in Washington, it seems to be paying off. POLICE FATALITY figures show that as of May last year, there had been 15 pedestrians killed. So far this year, there have been seven. No one can say, of course, whether the program can take the credit for the drop in pedestrian deaths. But it's likely that at least some of any of those 7,840 pedestrians ticketed last year are thinking twice before jaywalking again. Capt. Wayne Layfield said he expan- ded the pedestrian program last January with a $33,000 grant from the federal government. Now the District has five officers working on overtime during the evening rush hour at downtown points where there are the most violations, said Layfield, who is commanding of- ficer of the traffic enforcement branch. "THEIR JOB is to enforce the pedestrian regulation which means walk only when the sign says so and to catch drivers who don't yield the right of way to pedestrians, a violation that costs five points on a driver's license," Layfield said. Layfield conceded it would be cheaper not to use police officers for such assignments. And he said the reason he uses officers on overtime is: "They're the only ones available." But, he added, "One problem with using meter maids is that citizens know they are not really police officers, and in face-to-face confrontations they give the meter maids more trouble. The city has dropped the three-hour classes it offered last year to pedestrians who didn't want to pay the fine. "Few people wanted to take the time to go," Layfield said. "It was easier just to pay the $5."