ht £ir4igan Dailij Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Combating sexism on campus 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in T,hhe Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. F THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 19711 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT BAUER 'U' and HEW: A year after THE UNIVERSITY has been charged during the past year with implementing an affirmative action program adopted after the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare demanded a corrective plan against sex discrimination in employment practices. Last month, however, University women filed a formal com- plaint with the Department of Labor, claiming the University is acting in "bad faith" concerning the plan, and that the plan itself is "distorted, confused, and deficient." The articles on this page examine some of the issues involved in the current dispute over sexism in hiring at the University. RUTH BENSON is president of the Connecticut chapter of the Women's Equity Action League (WEAL), a group of profes- sional women which is sponsoring a petition drive asking the dissolution of the American Council for Education's advisory board to HEW, of which President Robben Fleming is a member. GAYE CROUCH is president of PROBE - the coalition of University women which filed the recent charges - and is also national coordinator for University compliance for the National Organization of Women. VIRGINIA NORDIN is the chairwoman of the University's Commission for Women. ..:::"..:.Y:: r:." ::l . . !r :..:C:::'i:i:::t:4..".......: r:::ti Y ' A YEAR AGO this week, the Univer- sity entered into a shotgun com- mitment toward ending discrimination against women in its employment prac- tices. Threatened by the government with non-eligibility for federal con- tracts, University administrators sub- mitted a detailed affirmative action program to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Although the program was termed "historic" by the Nixon administration, local women's groups were wary. They suggested that the goals and timetables for its implementation would not bring the percentage of women employes on campus sup to minimal nationalfigures, -- much. less, deal with the more subtle types of employment discrimination. But they were willing to wait and see whether significant improvements would be made by the University. LAST WEEK, they stopped waiting. In a formal class action complaint to HEW, PROBE - a coalition of pro- fessional women - charged that the University has failed to implement even the lackluster goals of its "his- toric" plan. Sadly, PROBE appears to be correct in its assessment. One of the more important aspects of the University's program is the goal of achieving equal salaries for male and female employes in the same job category. The University also pledged the payment of back wages to female employes who had received lower sal- aries than men holding the same positions. - However, the actual efforts of the University have been less than faith- ful to its promises. In the only case of sex discrimination reviewed since the plan was submitted, the University refused to allocate back wages to reveals that the University has pro-. moted a much higher percentage of men than it had projected in the ac- tion plan, while the percentage of pro- motions for women has been much lower. These examples of lagging achieve- ment are -even more distressing if one considers that the actual goals and timetables are themselves rather lim- ited in scope. The affirmative action program pledges an increase in female academ- ic positions of only 2.1 per cent by 1973- 74 - a miniscule figure which seems to contradict the University's public com- mitment to "vigorously" recruit women. IT IS CLEAR that the attitude of the University is decidedly against mak- ing the alleviation of sexism a high priority. And this is most unacceptable in a public institution which is sup- posed to closely observe the law - in- cluding its requirement of equal op- portunity regardless of sex. This is one of the most crucial pre- cepts of American society, for it is in- tended to allow all human beings the opportunity to realize their full po- tential - despite barriers set up by cultural and social traditions. Since it is evident that the Univer- sity has not accepted the burden of al- leviating its discriminatory employ- ment practices, it was particularly dis- quieting to learn last week that the chief executive of the University, Pres- ident Robben Fleming, is one of five college officials who will represent the nation's colleges on the American Council of Education's committe to ad- vise HEW on ending employment bias. For Fleming and the rest of the Uni- versity administration have been less than honest in their public pronounce- ments on this question. The statistics clearly bear out the view that the ad- ministration is more concerned with maintaining its eligibility for federal contracts than with firmly pursuing a policy toward equal employment of women. THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan has had a full year. It is time for the federal government and members of the University community to step in and insist that the University's dis- criminatory practices be ended. --THE SENIOR EDITORS a Women: Facing a backlash By RUTH BENSON THE BACKLASH against affir- mative action to end sex dis- crimination in universities began the moment women filed their first complaints with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, The University of Michigan, for example, appealed to other schools to join it in resisting HEW en- forcement in November, 1970. But these very early efforts to obstruct compliance were primi- tive and unorganized - for one major reason: The universities could not believe that anyone could take the oppression of wom- en seriously. These first efforts to block compliance were, there- fore, as crude and unimaginative as later efforts to achieve com- pliance. This stage did not last' long. It is now obvious that the backlash has intensified and is gaining "respectable" institutional support and structure: A recent case in point is the appointment of five presidents to an "Affirmative Ac- tion Committee" by Logan Wil- son, president of the American Council on Education (ACE) a prestigiousnorganization of univer- sity presidents, funded partially by universitysmembershipdues. The purpose of this "committee" is, in the language of the ACE newsletter of Nov. 19, to seek the "cooperation" of HEW in estab- lishing "uniform guidelines on sex and race discrimination. WHO ARE THESE 'Commitee" members and what exactly do they represent? Derek Bok of Har- vard, currently under HEW inves- tigation. Robben Fleming of the University of Michigan, now un- der HEW investigation. Clifton Wharton, Jr. of Michigan State, now under HEW investigation. Terry Sanford of Duke, not under HEW investigation, and not in compliance with HEW guidelines either. Martha Peterson of Bar- nard/Columbia. Columbia is un- der HEW investigation. Most of Barnard's tenured faculty is white male. Imagine that Alcoholics Anony- mous set up a committee to nego- tiate with the government to ban all liquor advertising. Imagine that they appointed to this com- mittee the presidents of Schen- ley's, Seagram's, Johnnie Walkers, Jack Daniels', and Gilbey's. Im- possible? Ludicrous? Apparently not, if one were to follow ACE's standard of eligibility. Needless to say, the ACE ac- tion prompted immediate protest. Members of the Women's Equity Action League, Professional Wom- en's Caucus, the National Organi- zation of Women, and many other women s groups have joined in a nation-wide petition campaign against Wilson's incredible action. In addition, university presidents are being asked to withdraw from, the ACE. The response has been imme- diate, intense, and imaginative. It's hard for women in the move- ment to believe that men still think they live in a penalty-free ask HEW not to demand confi- dential records, not to insist on retroactive pay (one of Fleming's special interests), not to inter- fere with admissions sex quotas. More generally, this committee will ask HEW simply to lay off. But if HEW is serious about not being neutral, if it really means that it is the advocate of women and minorities-it can not possi- bly entertain these appeals. In fact, HEW should publicly de- nounce such efforts. This ACE action is only one example of the institutionaliza- tion of the backlash. Representa- tives from the New York State university system, currently under HEW investigation, recently met with the intransigent anti-woman Rep. Emmanuel Celler (D-N.Y.) to lobby for dilution of anti-sex discrimination legislation. Univer- sities are harrassing and firing ac- tive feminists. HEW found the 4 It's hard for women in the movement to believe that men still think they live in a penalty-free environment .. . It is offensive to be treated as if wewere still asleep. environment where they can con- fidently announce such an action. It is offensive to be treated as if we were still asleep. Yet it has its advantages. had ACE realized how together we are, they might have done this secretly, and we would never have known about it. WHAT WILL this committee do if it actually meets with HEW of- ficials sometime next month? If its collective behavior imitates the behavior of its individual mem- bers, then it will have to be re- named as the Anti-Affirmative Action Committee (One ACE of- ficial described it as a "Save the Administrators Committee.") As it now stands, we can expect it to University of Pittsburgh guilty of two cases of such reprisals. BUT FOR university women. the strict enforcement of HEW guidelines is crucial because it is one of the few legal instruments that applies to the conditions of their employment. When Atty. Sylvia Roberts of NOW wins Bra- den vs Univ of Pittsburgh and Braden vs Posvar, Chancellor of the Univ. of Pittsburgh. women will then have won the right to Sue uniiwrsities through direct legal proceaurez. For the time being, academic women are forced to rely on HEW. That is why spurious actions like .the ACE's no longer; pass with- out protest. ' administration: Still discriminating Cheryl Clark, the. Highway tute. Although a male in the versity ruled not "overt or Another key a research assistant in Safety Research Insti- Clark was paid less than same position, the Uni- that discrimination was willful" in her case. goal of the University's plan is the achievement of a ratio of female employment in academic posi- tions that is at least proportional to the availability of qualified female job applicants, But here again, the University's ac- tions have fallen short of its commit- ment. PROBE's careful investigation By GAYE CROUCH AFTER YEARS of turning a deaf ear to women's claims of un- fair employment practices at the University, President Robben Fleming is now claiming that wo- men are being unfair in charging the University with bad faith in implementing its Affirmative Ac- tion Program for Women. Is it really unfair of women to demand what's legally theirs? Perhaps. The women don't think io, of course. But who could dis- pute the word of the University administrators on the subject of unfairness, since they themselves have shown such expertise and fi- nesse in their practice of it? The Commission on Women, for example, has been the subject of much of this unfairness: 0 Though PROBE strongly urg- ed Fleming to select the Commis- sion from the membership of wo- men's activist groups, he c h o s e instead to select at random a group of women who for the most part had expressed no interest in women's rights. 0 Of the two men he originally appointed, one was apathetic and resigned shortly after accepting the appointment. Perhaps by ac- cident, he was replaced by a man (sociology Prof. Gayl Ness) who is fair and reasonable. The other male Fleming appointed, Ed Hay- es from the Personnel Dept., duti- fully represents the administra- tion's point of view. 0 Fleming hasn't even been'fair to the Commission he appointed. They were not allowed to review the affirmative action goals and timetable prior to their submis- sion to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, or' to see all of the correspondence between HEW and University officials; and they have not, been consulted at the planning stages in University policy formation, either. The en- tire responsibility for correcting inequities based on sex has been dumped on them without any real authority to implement changes - all the long hours spent by Com- mission members have been a vol- unteer service to the University with little thanks and no renum- eration. This is a kind of typical exploitation of women that we most deplore. Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEATTIE DAVE CHUDWIN Executive Editor Managing Editor STEvE KOPPMAN.............Editoria1 Page Editor RICK PERLOFF .... Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY .... Assistant Editorial Page Editor LARRY LEMPERT..... Associate Managing Editor LYNN WEINER ... Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE ................ Arts Editor JIM IRWIN.. Associate Arts Editor ROBERT CONROW ... Books Editor JANET FREY ... .. .... Personnel Director JIM JUDKIS ..............Photograr-v Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Lindsay Chaney, Mark Dillen, Sara F0itzgerald, Tammy Jacobs, Alan Lenhoff, Arthur Lerner, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Robert Schreiner, W.E. Schrock, Geri Sprung. Defending the Women 's Commission AT EVERY LEVEL in the Uni- versity, women are told explicitly and implicitly that they are less valuable than men. Although the personnel director may no longer state openly to women that they do not have "management poten- tial," the attitude still prevails, and this is the practice. The University continues to hire mediocre males (predominately visible in the Personnel Depart- ment and in high level adminis- trative positions) and offer them on-the-job training - usually by low-paid women. University administrators r e - cently missed an opportunity to show good faith in affirmative action by not promoting a woman to fill the new position of Direc- tor of the new Administrative and Professional Personnel Office. In- stead, typically, a man was pro- moted. Last week they offered a further slap in the face to women on this campus by hiring a wo- man from Detroit as associate di- rector for that office instead of promoting a woman already em- ployed by the University. WE CAN ASSUME from t h i s action that the personnel officials either continuously delude them- selves into believing that there are no competent women on cam- pus capable of filling such posi- tions, or they know these women are here and are afraid of having to compete with superior intelli- gence and competence. They may also fear the anger of women who have suffered years of mistreat- ment at their hands. Most women will recall their first 'experience of walking into the personnel of- fice and being asked to take a typing test regardless of their qualifications, educations, or job interests. Because the Executive Orders apply only to employment prob- lems, undergraduate women are not protected from discriminatory admissions policies at universities However, if the University want- ed to be "fair", the admissions quotas of 55 per cent male and 45 per cent female (at the LSA freshman level) would be dropped and standardized admissions qual- ifications would be applied to both females and males. Also, the Uni- versity has learned over back- wards to be unfair to female graduate student employes byvig- orously' protesting HEW's claim to jurisdiction over graduate ad- missions where graduate status is a prerequisite for employment as a teaching or research assistant. By VIRGINIA NORDIN THE UNIVERSITY'S Commission For Women, unlike similar groups on other campuses, "lit on its feet, run- ning." The Commission came into being last January, following an investigation by the U.S. Department of Health, Edu- cation and Welfare into the Univer- sity's possible discrimination against women. The Commission was charged with several tasks: --To review and recommend changes in University policy in light of HEW's Affirmative Action Program, -To inquire into all University poli- cies, procedures, and practices which might discriminate against women. -To help the Personnel Office to eliminate discriminatory practices and to introduce new policies of equal op- portunity for women. -To work with academic depart- ments on recruitment, employment, and promotion practices. THE COMMISSION, made up of a small group of 14 people, has enormous responsibilities before it. And it is gen- erally under-strength because some members can't attend Commission meetings regularly. Nevertheless, it al- ready has made definite progress. tember, after several months of nego- tiations, University officials agreed that an employe could not stop a review of her file by the Personnel Representa- tive and the Women's Representative. FOLLOWING THE URGINGS of the Commission, the Personnel Department has established a new Professional and Administrative Office which operates under guidelines designed to give wom- en already on campus opportunities for better jobs. The new office must pub- licize all job openings on campus and consider applications from University personnel before off-campus applicants are interviewed. The Commission holds a weekly two- hour meeting. Members also put in sev- eral hours on committee work. The Committee on Research has a $9,000 grant for doing a comprehensive sur- vey of the salary structure within and across units of the University. The sur- vey is to identify places where the Uni- versity, under the Affirmative Action Program, should expand entry oppor- tunities where women are under-repre- sented. This will help to promote move- ment up job ladders and eliminate sal- ary differentials. In general, the Commission has main- lines. Lower level administrators do not take the affirmative action program seriously because t h e y have not been compelled to. Flem- ing could provide a quick and sim- ple remedy to these problems by issuing clear and concise guide- lines and requirements for affirm- ative action, and by imposing penalties against units found guil- ty of non-compliance. Of course, HEW should pro- vide him with the incentive to do this by withholding contract funds and declaring the University ineli- gible for further contracts. In the event neither of the above remedies work and women begin to lose patience with the slow and ineffective enforcement of the Executive Orders, then the women themselves may find it ne- cessary to walk out en masse and close down the entire operation of. the University. LAST WINTER the University was inappropriately lauded by Nixon for providing a "historic" model for affirmative action. Nov is the time for the University to really make an effort towards his- torically significant changes by consulting with the affected wo- men3f fn (jPg3i.) A . A nri csrPfv. . -Daily-Sara Krulwich -Abolish all nepotism rules as these rules are discriminatory against women; -Adopt non-discriminatory ad- missions policies for both grad- uate and undergraduate schools; -Establish fair and equitable complaint procedures; -Pay back wages plus interest to women victimized by sex dis- crimination; -Publicize and post in conspic- uous places all job openings, in- cluding unambigious job descrip- tions and required qualifications; -Provide special training and recruitment programs designed to bring women into the tradition- ally male jobs; -Provide adequate support for client-controlled child care cent- ers; -Establish maternity and pa- ternity leaves for staff with the same privileges currently grant- ed men for military leaves; and -Stop discriminating against women in the retirement program and reimburse retired univer- sity women who have been receiv- ing less compensation than males who contributed the same amount. Universityradministrators have recently expresssed concern that the tight budget squeezes w i11 cause an "erosion to mediocrity" "1 * Commission for Women meets The Cheryl Clark case demonstrated of the negotiations last year, executive