0 Saturday, May 17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven University blasts Affirmative Action report (Continued from Page 1) the choice when women and minorities have, by reason of our social structure, been given fewer opportunities to acquire the experience. "WE THOUGHT that in the present situation, with the col- lege under severe and continu- ing financial pressure, it was desirable to have the most ex- perienced person in the posi- tion." Two Regents disputed that conclusion. Several high Uni- versity officials later agreed that the "experience' issue flies in the face of affirmative action - a federally endorsed concept which calls for women and blacks to be hired over equally qualified whites and males to overcome past dis- crimination. But the Regents' majority support for the Fleming-Rhodes response appeared to greatly cut the chances that the Cobb affair will see further investi- gation. MOREOVER, Washington of- ficials of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) yesterday quashed their regional office's brief attempt to withhold a huge University research grant. The half-million dollar high- way research contract had ap- parently been held up pending HEW's probe of the Cobb affair for possible affirmative action violations, but officials said it would be many weeks before any judgment of the Univer- sity's actions is made. Fleming and Rhodes' answer to the Cohen committee report, echoed loudest by Regents Law- rence Lindemer (R-Stockbridge) and Deane Baker (R-Ann Ar- bor), claimed the study "places undue reliance on the impres- sions and statements of one in- dividual-Cobb. THE REPORT assailed the actions of Fleming and Rhodes, and noted Cobb's feeling that she was "never accorded the courtesies" usually given dean- ship nominees. Specifically, F 1 e m i n g and Rhodes denied the Cohen com- mittee's conclusions that the two men never had a "thorough" interview with Cobb, and "never seriously consider- ed" outside candidates while preferring Frye. "Both of us categorically deny that we did not have a thorough interview with Cobb," the state- ment declared, evidence of this, it continued, was that the total interview time for both men- including time in the Regents' interview of Cobb - totalled nearly three hours. FLEMING and Rhodes fur- ther contended that the report's charge of failure to seriously consider o u t s i d e candidates "contrasts sharply" with the view of three Regents who voted for Cobb and felt the pair did not voice their Frye support strongly enough. But the joint statement made no mention of some of the re- port'semost serious charges-of failure to properly request a tenure decision on Cobb, insis- tence that tenure be granted in LSA, and apparent failure to extend Cobb "the traditional courtesies." Rhodes, whose voice was re- portedly "full of gloom" when he first contacted Cobb, blasted the committee's work in a sep- arate, personal response. He termed the statement "merely supplementation" to his joint answer with Fleming, but the "supplement" ran a p a g e longer. WHILE insisting he spoke "not in any combative sense," Rhodes reinforced the adminis- tration's attack on Cobb's cred- ibility, chiding the report for "astonishing reliance on the im- pressions, interpretatons, state- ments, and allegatons of one individual." Using terms like "misrepre- sentation" and "frail evidence indeed," Rhodes essentially re- peated the joint statement's claims, adding denials of dis- courtesy to Cobb and alleged vagueness his letter to the Zoology Department requesting a quick tenure decision on Cobb, a cell biologist. On the tenure request, he declared: "I do not find the letter in question ambiguous, nor indeed do the vast majority of those who have read it." He cited no survey or statistics to support this claim. RHODES, known for his re- fined manners and English ac- cent, appeared most upset by the charge of discourtesy. "I want only to deny," Rhodes said, reading from the state- ment, "that in any of my deal- ings with Dr. Cobb I behaved with anything less than the ut- most courtesy and considera- tion." But he did not answer the specific charge of speaking in an unencouraging tone and failing to congratulate or wel- come Cobb. Both men noted that more detailed answers would be pro- vided to HEW later. IN A FURTHER indication of the Regental support for Flem- ing and Rhodes' posture on the Cobb affair, the Board yester- day issued its own three-page statement, dealing primarily with drawing up clear guide- lines for the next LSA dean se- lection. But in the midst of these new rules, it contended: "The President and Vice Pres- ident have always interviewed candidates with care"-an ap- parent reiteration of Fleming and Rhodes' reply to the Cohen probe. Regents Baker and Lindemer used the strongest language in assailing the administration's critics on the Cohen panel and elsewhere. L I N D E M E R, speaking in loud, strident tones, called the report "totally unfair, un- warranted, and in some in- stances rather vicious." All eight Regents gave indi- vidual statements in reaction to the Cobb affair. James Waters (D-Muskegon), the only black on the board, and Sarah Pow- er (D-Ann Arbor), the only wo- man, offered the strongest criticism of Fleming and Rhodes' actions in the Cobb affair. Waters, speaking in a low, resigned voice, looked straight at Fleming and called Cobb's two-year contract offer "an act of lack of good faith" by the ad- ministration, and said Cobb had not been given "due process." POWER, whose voice quiver- ed as she spoke, urged greater consideration of women and blacks for high positions, and expressed "regret" that talks with Cobb were not resumed. She praised Flemings actions and did not mention Rhodes. Asked later if this reflected op- position to Rhodes' role in the crisis, Power said emphatically, "No comment." She also joined with Waters and two other top-level offic- ials, who requested anonymity, in voicing disappointment at the Fleming - Rhodes statement on the "experience" factor in se- lecting deans. In the day's other "Cobb af- fair" development, Affirmative Action Director Nellie Varner confirmed earlier reports that a Consumer Products Safety Com- mission representative had in- formed t h e University last Tuesday that its half-million dollar contract was being held up. Varner added that HEW Equal Opportunity Specialist Bernard Rogers "indicated that the contract would not be clear- ed until some materials asso- ciated with the Cobb investiga- tion were received by his re- gional office. But Barry Anderson, Acting Chief of Onerations in HEW's Higher Edtucation Division in- sisted yesterday that the con- tract was not being withheld. He said the regional office acted outside its authority. FOUND BURIED TREASURE PRAGUE () - A Slovak bricklayer was digging a well at his newly built house in Sal- ka, Nove Zamsky, eastern Czechoslovakia, when at the depth of 2 meters he discovered an earthenware vessel contain- ing 85 silver soins. Experts say they have been in the ground since the 16th century; the earliest is dated 1471 and the newest 1588. The collection is of considerable nu- mismatic value, experts say. RENT IT ! TV's Stereos Air Conditioners HI-F ISTUDIO 215 ASHLEY--668-7942 Goddard College Summer Study In Theater/Music/Dance June 2-August 22, 1975 An intense program of daily class- es, workshops and performances. Visiting artists include: Laura Dean, Nora Guthrie, Ted Rotante, The Rubenstein Theater Founda- tion, Eric Salzman, Sara Rudner, Meredith Monk/The House, Steve Paxton, and the Bread and Puppet Theater. Paul Vela, Director. Other Summer Programs include: Social Ecology; Women's Studies; Learning Disabilities. Academic credit. Options for con- tinued work at BA and MA levels. Write: Office of Summer Programs Goddard College, Box TML Plainfield, Vermont 05667 .Laurence Harvey &Frank Sinatra in 1962 THE MANCHURIAN An incredibly suspenseful film concerning a bizarre plot by the Chinese to interfere with the American electoral process and take control of the government. Harvey plays the role of a broinwashed soldier who is trained to kill of the drop of a certain card. Sinatra as his wrtime com- mander and Angela Lansbury as his scheming mother struggle over his personal fate. Cinema Guild TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH.AUD. 7:3-&:0 rtl ADONLC~iY $l