MiSU salary release bares sex bias By RALPH VARTABEDIAN University administrators have refused to disclose detailed. salary information in recent months. Ninety miles away in East Lansing, Michigan State University is preparing to re- lease its second and more de- tailed salary list. MSU first released the closely guarded secrets of academic pay in January when the Trustees voted on a motion by trustee Patricia Carrigan to make public the salaries of faculty members by name ,rank, title, sex and years of professional service. MSU was the first university in the state to do so. After six months of observa- tion, pronounced effects are clear in a number of job areas. Prof. Bob Repas, head of the Commit- tee for a Rational Pay Policy, a group of faculty who fought for the pay information releases, said the disclosure demonstrated "There was systematic discrimi- nation by sex." As a result the MSU Trustees have established a special fund of over $200,000 to correct in- equities in the system. Also MSU professors will receive, pending Trustee approval, an across the board four per cent raise. According to Repas, the salary disclosure also pointed up some shady footwork by department heads. One professor reported to Repas that his department head told him in confidentiality that he was the highest paid professor in the department. The professor was asked not to tell anybody, supposedly to prevent bickering. Following the disclosure, sev- eral professors in the same de- partment reported that they were told identical stories. Re- pas says, "This shows how a policy of secrecy can lead to in- equities. The system allows de- partment heads to keep it (any- thing) from any of the peasants below." The salary disclosures also re- vealed a number of "dog house cases" as Repas terms it. Some professors' salaries bore no re- lationship to their length of serv- ice or competency as recognized by colleagues. In some cases, Repas says, it was due to per- sonal grievances between faculty and department head. Racial discrimination has not yet been detected. Until the new salary lists are publicized with more complete information, it will be difficult to evaluate min- ority status. The salary list from January does not reveal the race of personnel. See SEX, Page 9 Fleming to discuss 'U' salary release with Regents, lawyers President Robben Fleming initiated. will discuss with University at- The request was based in part torneys and the Regents this on a recent court ruling in week the possible disclosure of which Bay County Circuit Judge the University's salary schedule, Leon Dardas ruled that Sagi- Fleming informed The Daily naw Valley College - as a tax- yesterday. supported institution - must Responding to a letter from disclose salaries of paid admin- Daily Editor Alan Lenhoff istrators, faculty, and staff. which requested the salary list- The ruling, Lenhoff contend- ings of all University employes, ed, sets a clear precedent for Fleming wrote "we will con- the salary disclosures of all sult our counsel and the Re- state colleges and universities. gents and give you an answer Specifically, Lenhoff's letter as soon as possible." requested the nane, sex, minor- Lenhoff's letter, written with ity code, salary, years of serv- the support of many Daily staff ice, and job title for all admin- members, said that should the istrators, faculty and staff of University not comply with the the University. request, legal action would be See FLEMING, Page 9 ZS r e , irl ig tn tti1 BUCK High-83 Low-75 Showers Vol. LXXXII, No. 42-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 15, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages S. Viets battle for Quang Trn; dikes bombed SAIGON (R) - Severe fighting raged around Quang Tri yesterday and South Vietnamese troops advancing from the northeast were reported within 500 yards of the pro- vincial capital. Meanwhile the official Vietnam News Agency in a broadcast monitored in Tokyo said U.S. planes "in many waves" bombed dikes on the Red and Tra Ly Rivers, as well as several villages in Thai Binh province yesterday and Thursday night. The North Vietnamese agency said six persons were killed and several others were wounded. Military sources said North Vietnamese gunners shot down a helicopter, killing Col. Nguyan Trong Bas, chief of staff of the airborne division making the advance from the northeast. -Associated Press Why are these men laughing? President Nixon and former Secretary of the Treasury Johri Connally joke with reporters as they pose for pictures at the Western White House yesterday. Connally reported to Nixon on his recently- completed trip around the world. ALTERNATIVES: Regents to face new plans on fhousing Eight South Vietnamese also were wounded when the heli- copter crashed outside Quang Tri. By JAN BENEDETTI In a year marked by a lack of campus activism, possibly the most controversial issue was the proposed Afro-American and Cul- tural Living Units for the resi- dence hails. The Regents rejected this pro- posal in March, stirring up bit- terness among those students who had worked on the project. But that rejection did not kill all the support for the units. An ad hoc committee, com- missioned by the Regents has since formulated several "alter- native proposals" to the units, subject to the Regents' review at their July meeting. The committee's report, how- ever, strongly emphasizes that the units are "the most effec tive way of meeting the serious problems confronting the stu- dent population" and a "means of reducing racial tensions and promoting cultural understand- ing among all ethnic groups." Meanwhile, the Housing Policy Committee at a recent meeting drafted a resolution directing the French, German and Slavic language departments to under- take affirmative action programs in the language houses. If such programs are not employed to discontinue the segregation found in those houses, the committee resolved t h a t t h e language houses be closed. The language houses were found to be segregated for fall, by a housing office investiga- tion. "The policy committee is try- ing to embarrass the Regents. They're saying, in effect, if you tolerate the language houses, why not the Afro - American unit," says Housing Director John Feldkamp, a member of the ad hoc committee. "The Regents made the mis- take of looking at the units as a racial situation, rather than a cultural situation" similar to the language houses, according to Phil Cherner, a policy commit- tee member. The Regents turned down the units primarily on the grounds that the housing might be seg- regated. Despite the policy and ad hoc committees' strong support for the units, both groups admit that establishment of the hous- ing for this fall is no longer possible. "The sponsors of the units thought they were sabotaged. We might have lost all the good will and impetus and I don't think it can be recaptured. Many people were totally em- bittered by the Regents' deci- sion and no one really knows what to do," Feldkamp says. The ad hoc committee also concludes in their report that "none of the alternatives ex- plored capture the student self- generated interest and support that is so vital to the establish- ment of a program that is to have a significant impact on the problems currently confronting our campus." The report of the seven-mem- ber committee proposes: -Reorganization and staffing of the Special Programs Unit of See REGENTS, Page 9 The Saigon command said its troops had not entered Quang Tri, but paratroopers closing on the northeastern sector of city claimed they engaged commun- ist troops only 500 yards from the city limits. They claimed to have killed 18 North Viet- namese. It was reported from the task force headquarters that govern- ment marines fought a series of engagementshless than three miles from the city. The marines claimed they killed 69 communists and found the bodies of 48 killed by air strikes. They reported one ene- my tank, four trucks and a cap- tured U.S.-make 105mm howit- zer were destroyed. Marine casualties were put at three killed and 18 wounded. Paratroopers within a mile of the southern and southeastern edges of the city were shelled and engaged by communist troops but claimed they killed 19 communists while losing four killed and four wounded, a spokesperson said. In the air war, the U.S. Navy announced it had introduced a new television - guided, 2,000 pound bomb that scored direct hits against its first six targets in North Vietnam. The bomb, called "Fat Al- bert" by Navy aviators, was called an improved version of the "Walleye", a 1,000-pounder guided to its target by a tele- vision camera in its nose. Six VVAWs charged with conspiracy TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (P - Six antiwar activists were indict- ed by a federal grand jury yes- terday on charges of conspiring to disrupt next month's Repub- lican National Convention by fir- ing rifles and exploding bombs in the streets of Miami Beach, The indictment came only hours after the Democrats, on the last night of their national convention, passed a resolution which condemned the Nixon ad- ministration for attempting to "intimidate and discredit" the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). The six, all VVAW members, were accused of plotting to launch attacks on police s t a- tions, patrol cars and stores "with automatic weapons f i r e and inceniary devices." John Kniffin, of Austin, Tex., Peter Mahoney of New Orleans; and Scott Camil of Gainesville, Fla. were held under $25,000 bond. Camil, Florida coordinator for the organization, also was in- dicted on charges of instructing in the use and application of in- cendary devices and possession of a chemical bomb. A fourth, Alton Foss of Miami, was being held in custody by U.S. marshals in Dade Counly. The other two, Don Perdue of Fort Lauderdale and Wilhiam See GRAND, Page 9