The'Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 26, 1983-Page 3 Conference exhibits jobs for minorities, disabled By TRACEY MILLER Highlighted by a slide show for em- ployers who might be interested in hiring handicapped workers, the ninth annual Career Conference for minority and disabled students got off to a strong start yesterday at the Michigan League. "Equal to the Task," presented by theDupont Co., stressed the capability of disabled employees. "A handicapped person knows their limitations, but a non-disabled person may think he or she can do things that he may not be able to," said Dupont representative RichardDrach. IN 1981 Drach headed a Dupont study of the company's handicapped and non-handicapped employees. the survey found that 95 percent of Dupont's handicapped workers per- formed equal to or better than the non-disabled employees. Sonsored by the University's Career Planning and Placement Office, more than 90 major companies are par- ticipating in the conference which continues through today. Last year about 450 students atten- ded the conference and at least that many are expected this year, accor- ding to Denise Bristol, coordinator for Career Planning and Placement. THE COMPANIES, including Ford, Kellogg's and Arby's set up tables in the League's ballroom, and tried to attract potential employees with company literature and visual aids. Some Michigan companies said they prefer to recruit students from state colleges. "Although we recruit all over the country, we like to con- centrate on getting people from this area," said Kellogg's reprsentative R. E.Zehendner. But a representative from a California laboratory said the firm hires people from all over the country. "Our company is located 50 miles out of San Francisco, but we find that many students are ready to relocate after they graduate," said Helen Lyons of Lawrence Livermore Lab. THIS YEAR marked the first time Arby's sent a representative to the conference. "People that we hire from this conference will hold assistant managerial jobs. After more training, they could progress up to manager positions in different locations," said Arby's represen- tative Michael Ashby. Students who attended the con- ference said they came for a number of different reasons. "People come to the conference because this will probably be their only chance to meet a lot of employers at one time," said Lisa Pruitt, a senior majoring in psychology. Senior Phil Byrd, a com- munications major, said he came to the conference looking for infor- mation. "Basically, this is the best way to find out about certain com- panies and to also find out in the process if you are interested in that particular kind of work," he said. OTHER CAME to the conference looking ahead to the future. "I'll be able to meet these representatives (again) next year when they come," said LSA sophomore James Butler. "I figure by the time I am a senior, they may remember my face and be interested in what I have to offer them as an employee. The conference, however, is not restricted to current students. Christine Hurst, who graduated from the University in 1981 with a degree in Industrial and Labor Relations, said she came to the conference to try and .find a better job. "I came to this conference when I was a senior and was offered two out of state jobs. I turned them down and I now regret it. It is simply too hard to move up at the company I am now working for," she said. MSA okays funds for Mideast seminar By LAURIE DELATER Despite objections by a pro-Israel student group, the Michigan Student Assembly voted last night to allocate $1,000 to the Organization of Arab Students for a conference on the mid- east to take place this Friday and Saturday. MSA tabled the decision last week af- ter several assembly members quesitoned whether Israel would..be fairly represented at the conference; ASSEMBLY members charged that a list of speakers submitted to MSA's Budget Priorities Committee included several Israeli representatives but that most of these people were not listed on the actual conference agenda. Steve Belkin, who represented Students for Israel at the meeting, said the group was not contacted during -the planning stages of the 1983 Mideast Conference. "My question is that if this (conference) was a mutual concern, why wasn't there mutual in- volvement?" he said. Belkin said after the meeting that more Israeli input was necessary'to legitimize the conference. SEVERAL STUDENTS who were not affiliated with any organization also turned out to protest the funds. Jeff Colman, a public policy graduate student, said he thought t4e Organization of Arab Students had'a right to their opinion but that MSA should be made aware that the group's approach to the conference is not at ab- jective one. But conference coordinator Hussein Jamaleddin, who is president of the organization of Arab students, said a variety of Israeli speakers were invited but that several were unable to attend. "I invite whoever I think will fit the See MSA, Page 7 Doily Photo by JON SNOW Student Mary Torres Berry speaks to Central Intelligence Agency represent- ative Rick Busch at yesterday's career conference. HAGPPENIN- Highlight Seamus Heaney, Irish poet-in-residence at the University, reads his poetry today in the Rackham Amphitheatre, 7:30 p.m. Films Cinema II-Design for Living,7 p.m., Talk of the Town, 8:40 p.m., MLB 3. Anthropology-Dead Birds and Ax Flight, 7 p.m., MLB 2. Cinema Guild-The Seventh Seal, 7 & 10:15 p.m., All These Women, 8:45 p.m., Lorch Hall. Classic Film Theatre-The Girl Can't Help It, 7:30 & 9:15 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Hill St.-The Pawnbroker, 7 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. Alternative Action-The Unquiet Death of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, 8:30 p.m., Rm. 126 East Quad. Performances Professional Theatre Program-Old Times, by Harold Pinter, 8 p.m., Trueblood Arena, Frieze Bldg. UAC-Laughtrack, featuring Bill Thomas, 9 p.m., U-Club. Music at Michigan-Greg Yo ung, clarinet recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Psychiatry-Donald Klein, "Anxiety Reconceptualized," 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m., CPH Aud. Ind. and Opers. Eng.-Basil Whiting, "Quality of Worklife," 4-5 p.m., 311 W. Eng. Afroamerican and African Studies-Alfred Edwards, "The LEAD Program: An approach to the Minority Business Manpower Problem," 12 p.m., 246 Lorch Hall. Linguistics-Susumu Nagara, "Japanese Pidgin English in Hawaii: Semantic Coponential Analysis," 4-6 p.m., 3050 Freize Bldg. Chemical Eng.-James Wilkes, "Fortran IV Programming Language-III," 7-9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Russian and East European Studies-Mary McAuley, "The Petrograd Cheka and Popular Culture," 12 p.m., Commons Rm., Lane Hall. Chemistry-Chris Cantrell, "A Chemical Amplifier Technique for Measurement of Atmospheric Peroxy Radicals," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Economics-Hans Ehrbar, "U.S. Military Doctrine: Are All These Bombs Really Only Designed to Prevent War?" 7p.m., 414 Mason Hall. Collegiate Inst. for Values & Sci. and Sloan Foundation-Jens Zorn, "Michigan Physics in Transitions-1935-1965," 7:30 p.m., Rm. 120,. Law School. Computing Center-Forrest Hartman, "Intro to MTS File Editor, II- Intermediate Commands," 3:30-5 p.m., 176 School of Business Ad. Oral Biology-Geoffrey Walker, "Information Computers and Dental Schools," 4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Gender Res.-Richard English and Walter Allen, "Beyond Pathology: Historical and Contemporary Research Themes on American, Black Families," 4-6 p.m., E. Conf. Rm., Rackham. Phi Alpha Theta-Prof. Mills Thorton, speaking on the Alabama bus boycott, 5 p.m., 3609 Haven Hall. Residential College-Hunter Lovins, speaking on women, energy and politics, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Anderson Lounge, East Quad. School of Ed.-Phillip Runkel, Education in the eighties, 6:15 p.m., Rm. 1309 School of Ed. College of Engineering-Barnard Morais, "The System Engineering Process," 1:30-4:30 p.m., Carroll Aud., Chrysler Ctr. Meetings Michigan ay Undergraduates-9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Science Fiction Club-"Stilygai Air Corps," 8:15 p.m., Ground Fl. Conf. Rm., Michigan Union. Academic Alcoholics-1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Ann Arbor Jewish Club-7:30 p.m., Conf. Rm. 4, Michigan Union. Nurse's Christian Fellowship-4-5:30 p.m., 2703 Firstenberg. Panhellenic Association-Sorority Winter Rush, Open House, 1-3 p.m., Anderson Rm., Michigan Union. Medical Technology Program-Mass Mtg. and laboratory tours, 7-10 p.m., main hospital cafeteria, dining room 1. Weight Watchers-5:30 p.m., 2115 W. Stadium. Miscellaneous Tae Kwon Do Club-Practice, 6-8 p.m., Martial Arts Rm., CCRB. WCBN-"Radio Free Lawyer," 6 p.m., 88.3 FM. Student Wood and Crafts Shop-Power Tools Safety, 6-8 p.m., 537 SAB, Thompson Street. Museum of Art-Art Break, Margaret Coudron, "The Nude," 12:10 p.m. Women Engineers-Interview with Hewlett-Packard, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 1047 E. Eng. Int'l Cntr.-"Getting Organized and Documented for Your Trip to Europe," 12-1 p.m., Int'l Ctr. Rec. Rm. SOS Community Crisis Center- Interview for volunteers, call 485-3222. UAC-Mini-Courses sign, Michigan Union ticket office. Center for Continuing Education of Women-"Strategies For Finding a S . - .-.. . -. . I. , r,, ,. - - - V1_;11 - 7 t- 'U' stalls contract, says GEO (Continued from Page 1) "They're saying, 'We just don't want to give (more money) to you.' " The union is seeking a higher tuition waiver for graduate student teaching assistants, who presently are granted waivers based on the number of hours spent teaching. "Economically we've been steadily losing over the past several years," said Toni Griffin, a member of the union's steering committee. She said pay for teaching assistants has been eroded because of "small raises, like everyone else, but (also by) large jum- ps in tuition." GRIFFIN SAID that GEO considers tuition waivers to be a central issue in the negotiations but that University of- ficials do not. "(Teaching assistants) have to pay tuition to work here, but the University is saying it's an unrelated issue," she said. "We say it is a related issue." Colleen Dolan-Greene, who recently took over as the' Unviersity's chief negotiator, refused to discuss charges that the University is ot willing to come to an agreement with GEO. "I don't feel it is productive to bargain the press," she said, adding only that "some positive movement has been made by both sides." OTHER SPEAKERS maligned the University for it's "terrible" affir- mative action record. "We have proof that the University of Michigan had no intention and no desire to further affirmative action," Graves said. "It is clear that the record on af- firmative action by the University ... has been terrible." Graves based his comments on a memorandum of understanding signed by the union and the University in 1976. In it University officials promised to administer an affirmative action policy to increase the number of minority teaching assistants on campus. Since then, Graves said, the number of minorities has decreased steadily. Hugh Jarvis, president of the Michigan Federation of Teachers, told the group the rejection of the proposed contract last November was a sign of the union's strength. _ 1.1r Minn. PIRG suit blocked (Continued from Page 1) said. Several years ago, MPIRG suc- cessfully fought logging in the Boun- dary Waters Canoe Area because 34 members had canoed in the one-million acre wilderness in Northern Minnesota. MILLER SAID the current suit challenging the draft law has a more direct impact on all students. Since the BWCA case, Alsop said federal courts have narrowly defined when a group can challenge a law. If some members of a group actually sup- port what occurred, then groups such as MPIRG could not claim to represent everyone. Citing that 97.65 percent of all male students in Minnesota have registered for the draft, Alsop said MPIRG could not claim that its 40,000 student mem- bers would all be harmed by the law. A large portion were women, he said, who are not required to register. IN AN EFFORT to get better com- pliance with draft registration, Congress last fall required that studen- ts who applied for National Direct Student Loans or work study plans must sign a statement saying they complied with selective service laws before actually getting any money. Alsop did not set a date for the trial, but he allowed MPIRG to amend its case. Miller said MPIRG would introduce the three anonymous students as MPIRG members to become plaintiffs in the case. The judge's decision "was a temporary setback at most," he said. The Minnesota Civil Liberties Union also planned to enter three anonymous students. MEN'S DENIM JEANS The original dark denim 100% cotton jeans at a special price! These good looking jeans will fit you and your budget. Waist sizes 28-38. Style 130. Reg. 34.99. 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