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Show New Classes to Start at Trade Technical Institute on January 6 New classes will start Jan. 6 at Trade Technical Institute at Provo, according to news re- leases from the college there. Ross Fazzio says a new class in auto mechanics will start, and says also that the school has the latest in equipment and expert instructors for top training in this field. Anyone can start to learn this trade without previous experience or training, Mr. Fazzio said. The two-year course offered will qualify a graduate to begin be-gin in the third year of apprenticeship ap-prenticeship when he takes a job, and after two years of apprenticeship from, graduation, gradua-tion, he will be a journeyman mechanic. Without Utah Technical Tech-nical College training he would face a four-year apprenticeship apprentice-ship in the trade, Mr. Fazzio said. A trade where there is little chance for unemployment in the foreseeable future, can also be enrolled in beginning Jan. 6, according to Wilson W. Sor-ensen, Sor-ensen, president. This is the class in auto body repair and painting, which is a new class. This class can enroll beginners begin-ners now with no academic prerequisites pre-requisites necessary, and if pursued to its conclusion, it is a two-year course, beginning students may start now instead of waiting until next fall at the start of the regular school year. Completion of the two-year course would put the graduate in the position of going to work in his third year of apprenticeship, apprentice-ship, with only two years of apprenticeship ap-prenticeship necessary to become be-come a journeyman, President Sorensen said. In addition to the auto mechanics mech-anics class, there also are five other vocational-technical programs pro-grams open for new students beginning winter quarter Jan. 6. Students unable to enroll in the fall quarter may begin the courses now, according to the school officials. These courses include diesel mechanics, instrument repair (principally aircraft), electronics electron-ics (for training technicians in data processing, communications communica-tions and research), nurses' aides, and drafting and design technology. President Sorensen said the new classes beginning with the winter quarter represent a policy pol-icy on which Utah Tchnical College is embarking to get a-way a-way from the formalized "begin "be-gin in the fall of the year" practice which limits the schedules sche-dules of so many schools. Full details may be obtained about these and other classes by inquiring at Utah Technical College at Provo. |