Ci A& 4c ,' jH Vol. LXXXII, No. 43-S Ann Arbor; Michicjon-Tuesdoy, July 18, 1972 I en t.,ents cigni ruges Vol. LXXXII, No. 43-S Ann Arbor; Michigan-Tuesday, July 18, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages Sex bias case won; back pay appeal granted By JAN BENEDETTI - _ ~ -Associated Press The pride of Chicago Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley said yesterday that he "will support every candidate on the Democratic ticket, federal, state, and local." Daley said he sent a telegram to the Democratic presidential nominee Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) expressing his support for the entire ticket. McGovern responded that it was "a magnanimous move on your part and I am very grateful." SECOND MD. REBELLION: overnor ends riot at state penitentiary BALTIMORE, Md. (R) - Gov. Marvin Mandel calmed rebellious inmates at Maryland State Penitentiary yester- day in the second such incident at a state facility in two days, but he ran into opposition from prison guards. The guards walked off their jobs briefly, contending the governor's actions would lead to further trouble. Man- del met with the corrections officers for about an hour. Some 75 of the 750 inmates at the penitentiary at the fringe of the city's downtown. area seized four hostages yesterday and blocked firemen's efforts to put out a blaze in the facility's vocational training buildings. Iainl The inmates released the hos- F ed eral tages and returned to their cells after meeting with Mandel. Rep. Parren Mitchell, (D- Md.t, the state's only black OVL. in s congressman, was at the peni- tentiary yesterday. He and Mandel met with prisoners Sunday morning after a riot at u s the Maryland House of Correc- tion in suburban Jessup. "They're pacifying those pris- WASHINGTON W ) - The Jus- oners!" one guard shouted as tice Department joined the the guards left their posts to state of Michigan yesterday in gather in a recreation room. an effort to block the school "There's going to be no pun- busing program ordered for the ishment or anything else," he Detroit metropolitan area by a said. U.S. district court judge. Mandel said the guards The department's Civil Rights "were unhappy about the total Division filed a friend-of-the- situation here, and I don't blame court brief in the U.S. Court of them." Appeals for the 6th Circuit in The governor said Robert Cincinnati requesting a stay of Lally, head of the state public the district court order. safety department, would meet The brief asked that a stay with the guards today, be ordered so the appellate Mandelindicated his person- court can "hear and determine al intervention would end. "I'm not going to be on 'will questions relating to the con- call' for the prisoners," he said, stitutioamerits" of the case. "We made no commitments to The hearing en the appeal, by the inmates, but we said there Michigan Gov. William Milliken would be no physical or mental and state Atty. Gen. Frank reprisals," the governor told Kelley, for a stay or suspension newsmen. of forced busing orders by U.S. At least seven prison em- District Court Judge Stephen ployes, including three guards, Roth was scheduled by the 6th were hospitalized with injuries circuit court later yesterday. Monday. See JUSTICE, Page 8 Cheryl Clark, the first woman in the nation to de- mand back pay from a uni- versity on grounds of sex discrimination, has won her request in the test case of the University's new com- plaint appeal procedure. The decision, according to law Prof. Harry Edwards, Clark's lawyer, is important because now "once a disparity in salary (between men and women) is shown in a given case, it's up to the University to prove that it's hased on criteria other than sex." "The ruling confirmed what we had argued. The University had not developed a clear set of criteria for establishment of salaries. Women were always paid less," said Edwards. The unanimous decision of the three-member complaint ap- peal panel also reaffirms state law which stipulates that dis- crimination need not be inten- tional to be unlawful. In the case, the University argued that the discrimination was not intentional and there- fore did not constitute discrim- ination. Clark a research associate in the University's Highway Safety Research Institute, will be awarded a minimum increase of $1 320 yearly, retroactive to Jan. 26, 1971. "I'm very pleased. It was al- most anticlimatic. I thought we would lose," said Clark yester- day. President Robben Fleming de- clined to comment yesterday on the case. "This shows that the com- plaint appeal procedure is dif- ferent than the regular pro- cedure. I hope that its essential fairness will encourage more women to come forward with complaints," said Zena Zumeta, former University Women's Representative. "If salaries are made public, that will give women a better idea of their relative salary po- sitions and they can decide whether to complain," said Zumeta. Clark filed an original com- plaint in Jan. 1971, charging that she was receiving a lesser salary than a man with the same job. After this complaint, heard through the standard procedure, was denied Edwards charged that the procedure denied a complainant due process of law. The Commission for Women and the University's executive officers subsequently formulated the new complaint appeal pro- cedure to be used in casesrof alleged discrimination. In each case, the complainant and the University each choose one member of the board. The chairperson is chosen by the other two members from a slate selected by Fleming. --aily--ennyG ainer JARVIS TYNER, the Communist Party's vice-presidential nomi- nee, speaks before an estimated crowd of 75 in the Union Ball- room yesterday evening. VP hopeful presents CommunHist patfor-m By MERYL GORDON Communist Party vice-presi- dentia candidate Jarvis Tyner is campaigning for the office "by putting forth the most advanced people's program" in an effort to put pressure on Democratic pre- sidential hopeful Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.). In a press conference yester- day afternoon, Tyner outlined the Communist Party platform which calls for an immediate withdrawal of troops from South- east Asia, a minimum income of $6,500 per year for a family of four and a new tax system to "put the burden on the rich and super rich." "If McGovern wins," Tyner said, "we have to make sure that he keeps his promise to get American soldiers out of Vietnam 90 days atfer his inauguration." "McGovern is half-stepping in reversing Nixon's policies," lie continued. "We're very concern- ed about what happens in the elections in regard to issues, not personalities." Tyner has been travelling around the country recently seek- ing votes for himself and Coin- munist Party presidential can- didate Gus Hall, and attempting to get the party on various state ballots. "In '68 we were on the ballot in only two states," Tyn- er said, "but this year we're aiming for 27 states." "Things are different in this country now," Tyner added, "and the reception I've gotten f r o m people has been very 'arns and interested. We had Wallace peo- ple sign our petition to be on the ballots because they f e e 1 that we have a very progressive program for the working class." Tyner, a former shop stew- ard in the Teamsters Unitn, who's worked as a lithographer and furniture assembler, thinks there's "an immediate important need for a third people's party consisting of working people .. . and other oppressed groups." He envnsions the Communist Party as a part of this party, although not necessarily dominatin it. "As far as bringing about re- volution," Tyner said, ... "we'll need a socialist ownership of the means of wealth . . . 'sod when the majority is prepared, we'll move towards that."