U U7 a h. tq~ IF as # It Wednesday, June 10, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 -jr- Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 10, 1970 Federal rules released on working women EXPERT SAYS: 'Nation's colleges should help homc WASHINGTON OP) -- The D~e- partment of Labor yesterday is- sued guidelines to prohibit dis- crimination against women on federal government contract work. Meanwhile, the American Asso- ciation of University W o m e n (AAUW) released a study of atti- tudes among college educated men and women toward women and discrimination. The guidelines pertain to wages, hours, advertising in newspaper columns, seniority, job classifica- tions and retirement benefits. The document calls on employ- ers under such contracts to take "affirmative action to recruit women" for jobs where they have previously been excluded - and that includes management and management-training programs. Elizabeth Duncan Koontz, direc- tor of the Labor Department's Women's Bureau, announced the guidelines, which were more scores of recommendations made by a presidential task force on women's rights and responsibilities, released by the White House today after almost six months after it was submitted. The AAUW study said among a group with a high education level, 84 per cent of the women and 77 per cent of the men say women experience discrimination in the working world. In the same group, 43 per cent of the women and 60 per cent of the men say a woman's first re- sponsibility is to be a feminine companion of men and a mother. The association of university women said its opinion survey was made among a group having a higher level of education, income and age than the general popula- tion and does not reflect national attitudes. But it does reflect a key group that is involved in changing at- titudes, Dr. Shirley McCune, AAUW associate director, told a news conference. McCune noted that one-fourth of the female sample reported ob- serving discrimination a g a i n s t females. The analysis of the opinonnaire shows that apparently s o m e women still accept stereotypes about women in a working world and she said attitudes will have to change in both males and females. On the statement that "a suc- cessful woman is less attractive to men," 27 per cent of the women and 21 per cent of the men agreed. On another, 67 per cent of the women and 68 per cent of the men agreed that males resent a female boss. The guidelines released yester- day by the labor department pro- hibit such things as advertising in newspaper columns headed "Male" or "Female" unless sex is a bona fide occupational qualifica- tion. It prohibits making any dis- tinction between married or un- married persons of just one sex and denying employment to women with young children unless the same policy exists for men., It establishes child bearing as a justified reason for leaves of ab- sence. And it prohibits seniority based solely on sex, or retirement requirements for women that dif- fer from those for men. The task force report says there is widespread discrimination against women and urges the President to take steps to stop it. Unless something is done, it says, the nation may experience "ac- celerating militancy" or. at the other extreme, "deadening apa- thy.". College Press Service WASHINGTON (CPS) - Uni- versities do more to aggravate the problems of homosexuals in con- temporary American society than to alleviate them, according to Dr. Franklin Kameny, author of The Same Sex and founder and presi- dent of the Mattachine Society of Washington. A nationally-recognized expert on homosexuality, Kameny was interviewed by College Press Ser- vice to obtain some perspective on the upsurge of homosexual activ- ity on U.S. college campuses. Stanford, San Jose State, Cornell and the University of Minnesota are among schools where homo- sexuals have formed clubs within the past year. At the University, the Gay Lib- eration Front (GLF) was formed during the month of March and recognized by Student Govern- ment Council as a student organ- ization in early April. Presently, the local group is working to over- come President Robben Fleming's opposition to a Midwest Confer- ence on Homosexuality, which GLF is trying to sponsor here. Colleges a n d universities dis- criminate against homosexuals in the areas of counseling, curricu- lum and social activity, Rameny said. Counseling provided homosex- uals is "abysmally poor," accord- ing to Kamey, because counselors tend to approach homosexuality as a form of deviant behavior, at- tacking "not the problems, but the state." Instead of encouraging the homosexual to accept his na- ture, he said, counselors react as though homosexuality were some- thing bad that needs change. College curriculums, he said, are conspicuously absent of cours- es on homosexuality. New York University offered the first course on homosexuality last fall, Kam- eny said, and if m o r e schools would offer such courses, homo- sexuals wouldbenefit just as blacks have benefitted from the inclusion of courses on Afro-Asian history and culture in various academic programs. Academic emphasis on homo- sexuality, he said, could both help to eliminate prejudice and ignor- ance regarding homosexuals and make homosexuals open, rather than furtive and secretive about themselves. Concerning social activities, Dr. Kameny said, administrations and student governments should make in view offices and ballrooms just as educati available to student homosexual ed prim groups as to other campus organ- ple wh izations. At Columbia, he said, the terest in authorities permitted the staging GLF of a "mixer dance" into which to fight both homosexuals and heterosex- last we uals were admitted. ially job If "mixer dances" were held at ter to F numerous schools, he said, the consider cause of integrating the homosex- Accor ual into society would be aided. ence w As a recognized student organ- homose ization, the University's GLF is panel di entitled to the use of University speciali facilities and this Friday, is hold- religiou ing a dance. Like the one at Co- to the lumbia, it will be open to the pub- medical lic. homose However, GLF, with Fleming's Accor opposition to a conference, h a s homose apparently run into the very "very m problem it is fighting. In a letter because to Vice President for Student Af- base fro fairs Barbara Newell, Fleming said I tions o the proposed conference "ought, mosexu of the law, to be clearly onal in nature and direct- narily towards those peo- o have a professional in- n the field." has said it will continue t for the conference, and ek SGC members unoffic- ned them in writing a let- Fleming, asking him to re- r. ding to GLF, the confer- ould "offer workshops on xuality, public lectures and iscussions by such outside sts as jurists, doctors and s leaders who would speak public at large on legal, l and religious aspects of xuality." rding to Kameny, student xual organizations a r e nuch needed" on campuses they can serve as a power om which to protest viola- f the civil liberties of ho- als, educate the university i C s s f 1 4 T I I I z j ,1 Eves 6:25, 9:05 MIHGgN Matinees 1:00, 3:40 "AIRPORT is a great film all the way!" -Chicago Doily New: A ROSS HUNTER Production vcg aN BURT LANCASTER -DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET - GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN AU T;u; n ;,H0 DANA WYNTER - BARBARA HALE ®"r - Mon.-Thurs. Fri.-Sat. All Day Eves. Eves. Sunday $2.25 $2.50 $2.25 Matinees Monday thru Saturday $1.75 Read and Use Daily Classifieds protesters to stiff pris -Daily--Richard Lee EGGinomical cookery A sure sign of hot weather is the traditional "frying-an-egg-on- the-sidewalk" event and yesterday's 90 degree heat was all Susan Messer needed to give it a try. Perhaps it was just such a side- walk cook who first asked, "Do you want your egg sunny side up?" NO NGC THEATRE cORPORATION M-Thur. 8:15 only NOWA NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY Fri. 6:30, 10:00 W G Sat. 1:30, 5:30, SHOWING FUN VIL~ab Sun. 1:00, 4:30, 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7694300 8 :15 a wadleigh-maurice, ltd. production technicolor® from warner bros. PASS LIST SUSPENDED CHICAGO W)-A federal judge sentenced seven antiwar demon- strators to five years in prison yesterday for destroying Selective Service System records and gave stiffer punishment to three absent defendants who, he said, master- minded the assault. Judge Edwin A. Robson of U.S. District Court described the mis- DIAL 8-6416 ENDS WEDNESDAY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Aicligan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 33281 L.SA. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceeding publication and by 2 p.m.1 Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only, Student organi~a-1 tion notices are not accepted for pub- lication. For more information, phone 764-9270, Day-Calendar Wednesday, June 10 Summer Piano Concert Series Ushers: Ushers will be needed for Summer Piano Concert Series to be presented in Rackham Auditorium during July, and sponsored by the Univ. Musical Society. Persons interested in signing up to usher please come to the box office at Hill Aid. today, June 11. between 7 & 8 p.m., and see Mr. Wartner. "SMASHHIT'."- - U -N I I 1Mc147- . wwi :a r - N EWSWEEK sing three as the ringleaders of a raid May 25, 1969 on a draft board complex and sentenced them to 10 years in jail. In pronouncing sentence, the judge dismissed the defense con- tention that the demonstrators' action was nonviolent and said the incident was "violence, the violence that can bring about revolution." He said he hoped the penalties were severe enough to deter other youths from staging similar at- tacks on draft boards, Robson sentenced the fugitive defendants to five years in prison on each of two counts in the in- dictment and said the terms were to run consecutively. They are Linda J. Quint, 22, of Chicago, the Rev. Nicholas J. Rid- dle, 40, a Carmelite priest of Mil- waukee, and Charles Muse, 21, of Roxbury, Mass. The seven defendants in the courtroom also were sentenced to five years on each of the two counts, but the judge said those terms would run concurrently. He ruled that all 10 defendants would be placed on 10 years pro- bation for the other two counts in the indictment, to begin at the conclusion of their prison terms. Robson denied appeal bond for the seven defendants in the court- room. He'said the fact that Father Riddell, Miss Quint and Muse jumped bond near the end of the trial was a major factor in his decision. The seven had been held with- "Meyer's unabashedly.. .luscious...best!" Kevin Thomas-L.A. TIMES -U "A fun drama about a swinging lady!" Judith Crist-N.Y. MAGAZINE "Meyer.'s best..a merciless put on. Erica Gavin... electrifying The most electrifying ritual ever seen! RICHARD HARRIS CALLD HORE" f see HELD OVER The strange ritual of love be- tween the Indian Princess and the white man. The torture of the white man as he fights to become an Indian PAHNAVISIONTEC I NICOLOR GPPAREN'T'AL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED SHOWS AT: LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN Present KEN RUSSELL'S film o Do H. LAWRENCE'S COLOR by Deluxe United Aria -Thursday- "Scratch Harry" and "Bedazzled" I u BACH CLUB presents RANDOLPH SMITH Bach Club President & Founder, speaking on "RHYTHM IN BACH" featuring Bach's F Minor harpsicord concerto Refreshments & FUN afterwards THURS., JUNE 11, 8 P.M. Canterbury House 330 Maynard EVERYONE WELCOME! (no musical knowledge needed!) Great way to meet interesting people 663-2827, 761 -6981 Roger Ebert CHICAGO SUN-TIMES RUSS MEYER'S RATING NO ONE UNDER 1,8 ADMITTED! PIP'TH FOrUM {fIFTH AVBNLU AT LI3QERTY DOWNf~TOWN ANN ARBOR INFRAnTION 76-9700 6:50, 8:10, 9:30 662-4251 740 PACKARD 662-4241 On Wt Hangers SHIRTS'Dr Or _Cleaning Packaged Order HOURS COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY OPEN Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m: MON.-SUN. 7:30 A.M. TO 11 P.M. Saturday 7:30a.m. to 6 p.m. WASHERS STILL ONLY 25c, DRYERS 5c OBSERVER! fC Color Vision You must be Red- 2-6 hours Rates: $1 CALL: S. Mil I I INTRODUCING ERICA GAVIN AS VIXEN PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY RUSS MEYER AN EVE PRODUCTION IN EASTMANCOLOR RESTRICTED TO ADULT AUDIENCES or walk in-5 University of Michi Ann a I 1 I