Thursday, ay 29; 1 7$: THE MICHIGAN didtY Pacie Three- ---------2-195T- iC IAND IL a~ hre Class of- '75 faces gloomy job prospects By GORDON ATCHESON Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - This year's college graduates face much grimmer prospects in the job market than anyone had imag- ined, according to a survey re- leased yesterday by the College Placement Council ('PC). The study, based on question- naires sent to over 1,t00t poten- tial employers across thc coun- try, said that 18 per cent few- er graduates will be hired this year as compared to 197-1. P-:e- viously CPC, a non-profit or-gan- ization of college placement counselors, predicted a f o vr per cent drop, based on a No- vember survey. A MAJOR factor in the hi, ing decline was the extended down- turn in the economy. Both the automotive and constructive in- dustries, among the hardest hit by the recession, will have *lt per cent fewer openings for cofl- lege grads in 1375, the C PC reports. The only employers anticipat- ing an increase a ;jobs are state and local goverimeats, pe- troleum manufacturers an s'von- profit institutions. In 1974, the industries survey- ed hired nearly 86,060 college graduates but projected that 15,000 fewer jobs will be avail- able this year. "FOR THE major tv of grad- uates, supply was seen as ex- ceeding demand unless the eco- nomy improves substantially, ' the report says. "Comments an next season's outlook seem to indicate that little improvement is expected uptil possibly Spring, 1976." The decline has hit all degree levels. Doctoral candidates will find 20 per cent fewer jobs. Master's and Bichelar -:degree holders should get 1' per cent and 18 per cent fewer positions respectively: But top studen' s, 'minorities, and women in hi4h-demand fields should to "i a strong competitive pas ticon,' the sur- vey noted. THE STUDY'S fidLirgs wc re presented at the opening of a three-day CPC national conven- tion which has drarn leading educators and poliician,. Yesterday, Mlargarct Gor don of the Carnegie Counci on Pol- icy Studies in Higher !,duca- See FEW, Page 6 $135 million in student - - -' grants remain unspent Schoolhouse shootout An unidentified man injured in a shooting at a Brampton, Ontario high school isI the school to an ambulance yesterday. The student doing the shooting killed himse a classmate and a teacher as well as wounding 17 others. Ruling refused on RegE possible conflict o inte W A S H I N G T O N R - One-fourth of the $535 million is federal grant money avail- able for needy college students during the 1974-75 school year was not spent, the U. S. Office of Education said yesterday. The unspent. $135 million could have provided help for another 100,000 students, on top of the approximately 600,000 who received Basic Education- al Opportunity Grants (BOG) ranging from $50 to $1,050. THE disclosure comes as an embarrassment to the adminis- tration, which had initiated the BOGs program two years ago as a means of earmarking fed- eral money for the needy and, at the same time, reducing di- rect federal assistance to edu- cational institutions. Diane Sedicum, an assistant to the director of the Division of Basic and State Student Grants, said about 100,000 ad- ditional students had applied for and received notice of eligibility last school year. But, she said, those students later decided not to go to school or AP Photo enrolled on a part-time basis or in programs ineligible for the grants. Congress., has appropriated removed from $660 millidn for BOGs next year lf after killing and the administration is seek- ing permission to carry over the . unspent $135 million and apply it to grants also. IN ITS first year, $122.1 mil- n t s lion was appropriated for BOG grants for incoming freshmen only. About 525,000 applied and 220,000 received grants. re st a e vrfo 937 ob Ire Sedicumn said $60 million was ste time," said were some ser- volved here. It tr kpassing, but it By TIM SCHICK D the attorney The pre-trial hearing of argu- e will research ments against trespassing char- ssue an opinion ges facing 44 members of the sly as possible Graduate Employes U n i o n within the next (GEO) continued yesterday, s. 'with the prosecution calling wit- is a creature of nesses in an effort to show why aid Lansing At- charges should not be dismiss- e Swift, also a ed. The GEO members were Swift said Pow- arrested while picketing out- an elected offi- side of the University's Plant University Board Department buildings on Febru- litional claims of ary 27 and 28. s dealings with Walter Stevens, assistant di- e it impossible rector of the University Depart- if Ethics to rule ment of Safety testified that the driveway where the pickets ought the Board were arrested is owned by the cking the entire University and that there is no ning the matter "crosswalk" in that area. general's office, THE DEFENSE has attempt- sdictional issues ed to show that the place of the taybe it is buck- arrests is frequently used by t know." the public, Defense attorney added to the $475 trillion ap- propriated for freshmen and sophomores in the 1974-75 school year. Sedicrim said the law au- thorized a minimum of i$200 and a maximum of $1,400 per grant btt, based upon the govern- ment's higher projection of how many students would be eligible, the actual range was reduced to $50 and $1,050 to avoid running out of money. A B O U T 1.4 million stu- dents applied last year and 700,000 were told they were eligible. Sedicum said that would have consumed the full amount available if all had requested grants. Even at the lower figure of 600,000, the average grant should have been $750 but was re- duced to $675 because many students enrolled in education- al programs of more than six but less than eight months dur- ation, requiring grant reduc- tions, and others simply drop- ped out of school and lost part of their grant. Next year the government ex- pects 2.2 million applications from needy freshmen, sopho- more and juniors and expects one million to be found eligible and request payments, Sedi- cum said. Eligibility is based upon a complex index taking into ac- count such factors as total fam- ily income, number of wage earners, family size and ages, tax payments, and unusually high medical or casualty ex- penses. A student was eligible last school year if his family's index fell below $12,000. con0',tinues Donald Koster pointed out that while there is no crosswalk marked with lines, there are sidewalks at either side of the side of the driveway. This argument was some- what weakened by the testi- mony by Stevens and by Rich- ard Wedge, manager of main- tenance and construction in the- Plant Dept., who testified that pickets did occasionally enter inside of a fence which encloses the University property in that area. Koster remarked after the hearing that the testimony for the prosecution "didn't hurt us, but didn't help us either" The hearing will continue on June 8, and according to Koster, could run three more sessions before a decision on the motion to dismiss the charges is re- turned. By BILL TURQUE The State Board of Ethics yesterday denied University Re- gent Sarah Power's (D-Ann Ar- bor) request for an opinion on whether her husband's business relationship with the University constitutes a conflict of interest for her. The seven - member b o a r d ianimnoosly ruled it was not within their jurisdiction to rule an the ethical behavior of Pow- er, an elected public official. According to Act 196 of the state Code of Ethics, the Board may act only in cases involving ap- pointive officials of the state's executive branch. POWER'S husband, Phillip, is a shareholder in Suburban Com- munications, parent company for a string of suburban weekly newspapers, some of which ad- vertise U-M Dearborn course offerings, Mr. Power also holds an interest in the Averilt Press, a printing and typesetting serv- ice which has entered bids for University printing jobs. Power said Tuesday his business with the Unversity never totalled more than $300 to $400 a year. Donald Willis, Executive Sec- retary to the Board, said yes- terday, that Mrs. Power does not belong to either the cate- gory employe or "public offi- cer" of the executive branch as defined in Act 196. "It was simply a lack of jur- isdiction," said Willis. "We didn't even get into the specifics of the case." THE CASE will now return t a the office of State Attorney Gen- eral Frank Kelley, whom Power contacted in February for a rul- ing on the possible conflict of interest. Kelley referred the case to the Board last month. Assistant State Attorney Gen- eral John Pirich, a member of the Board, said the attorney general always refers questions concerning- ethical conduct of public officials to. the Board, "This is not some sort of a charade to wa Pirich. "There ious issues in looks like buc really isn't." PIRICH SAl general's office the case and i "as expeditiou . . sometime couple of week "All we are the statute," s torney Theodor Board member. er's status as cial ,and the t of Regents' trad autonomy in it the state, mad for the Board o on the case, Asked if he th was merely du issue by return to the attorney he said, "Juri are like that. M passing, t don't