The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 15-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, May 25, 1976 Ten Cents Twelve Pages White House bias charged WASHINGTON (A') - A presidential commission skipped over three women finalists to pick lower-rated males for this year's White House fellowship pro- gram, according to court records. The records also show that thousands of commis- sion documents were destroyed in "burn bags" after they were sought as evidence in a lawsuit that ac- cuses the panel of biaS against women. WITH THE suit pending, the Presidential Commis- sion on White House Fellows announced yesterday that recipients of next year's fellowships will include eight women, the most ever chosen for the program - and four times as many as last year. The 17 recipients for next year also include an Oriental male. An Associated Press inquiry shows the commission bypassed a highly rated Oriental male last year in choosing the current fellows. A DISAPPOINTED woman finalist, Dr. Serena Stier, sued the commission last Nov. 21, claiming sex bias. She based her suit in part on the fact that 14 of the 32 finalists were women, but only two women were selected as fellows, along with 12 white males. Carl Goodman, attorney for the fellowship commis- sion, declined to say why the higher-ranking woman were skipped over. He would neither confirm nor deny that the omitted higher-ranking male was non-white. Commission records filed with the U. S. District Court in Washington show the commission departed from its own numerical rating system last spring in picking this year's fellowship recipients. IT PASSED over female finalists whom the com- missioners had ranked 14th, 15th, and 16th. Instead, two white males ranked 17th and 18th were chosen. The commissioners themselves are mostly white males. The records show the commission also skipped No. 10, a male, whom several sources familiar with the case say is a Chinese - American, Ernest Chu of Chap- paqua, N.Y. The rankings were distilled from rankings assigned by each commissioner. The commissioners rated their choices in order, one through 32, based on oral and written exams. Final rankings were determined through averaging the individual commissioners' rank- ings. TWO OF the women finalists signed affidavits say- ing the program's director told them that 15 to 18 fellows would be selected from finalists for this year's program. Had the commissioners picked that many and had they followed their own ranking system, four or five women would have been chosen rather than two. Attorney Goodman said the commission's reasons for omitting the women had been given in testimony but that the testimony is being kept confidential to protect the privacy of those who were not selected. "People were not selected on the basis of numerical judgments," Goodman said. "They were selected on the basis of a consensus - gathering among the com- missioners. The numerical basis doesn't necessarily mean who gets selected. There were reasons why people weren't selected, but they are under court seal." EMAKESDEB Con corde Brown faces Ore. battle WASIIINGTON /1,- Two British- French Concordes brought faster than sound passenger flight to the United States yesterday but their debut was marred when a private plane came within 400 feet of one of the big jets during the landing. Racing - and beating - the sun in their journey across the Atlantic, the first of the two sleek jets landed at Dulles International Airport at 11:54 a.m., the second aircraft was only one minute behind. The British Airways plane, the first to land, made the journey from London in three hours and 53 minutes or slight- lv more thn half the time it takes a con-entional et. The Air France plane took slightiv less time to fly from Paris. Because the' rrossed four time zones dtring their flieht, the planes actually landed hefore they took off in local time measurements. A crowd estir'ated at between 4,000 and 5,000 crammed the observation tow- ers and platforms at the airport to see the delta-winged jets land in their char- acteristic drooped nose fashion. But as the British plane circled the airport to line up with the runway, an unidentified private plane crossed over him. A controller at Dulles had warned the British plane of the light aircraft in the area and Capt. Brian Calvert routinely asknowledged the warning. About a half minuterlater, the conilot, Capt. Normann Todd, radioed the Dutles tower: "Incidentally, we just missed that fellow by about 400 feet. The Concorde was flying about 230 miles ner hour at the time. It continued on its course and the small plane moved ont of the way. The Federal Aviation Administration said it did not know who was flying the small plane but a spokesman said the aircraft might have been a photo plane trying to take pictures of the 1,400 mile per hour Concorde. "As far as we're concerned, it was not an unsafe condition," a FAA spokes- man said. He noted the pilots had been warned of aircraft in the area and that they had spotted the plane. See CONCORDE, Page 6 By DAVID WHITING Daily News Analysis PORTLAND - Oregonians, as they prefer to be called, like to boast that no presidential candidate can hope to live in the White House without having first won the Oregon primary. There are two things one doesn't kid about in the Northwest - one is the environment and the other 'is politics. Since 1924, no president has been elected to the highest office in the land without first wooing a ma- jority of Oregonians. IF HISTORY is to repeat itself in this election year, the record appears to spell certain disaster for Demo- cratic presidential hopeful California Gav. Edmund "Jerry" Brown. Brown is expected to finish third here to- day, and that would nearly eliminate his chances of answering the Oval Office phone. Although Brown and most of his campaign supporters are saying he has a good chance of winning, the primary here, none of the "smart money" is being put on the thirty- eight year old governor. Brown is facing a major handicap capturing Oregon delegates because he filed too late to get his name on the ballot. He has been waging a hard write-in campaign, but it is doubtful that his efforts will be re- warded. OREGONIANS don't take kindly to newcomers and have a bad reputa- tion when it comes to penciling in a candidate's name. Nelson Rockefel- ler, in 1968, fought the strongest write-in race the state has ever seen and only garnered 11.4 per cent of the votes cast. Even Brown's hard-working cam- paign supporter and sister, Kathleen Brown Rice, is not about to predict victory for her brother at the Demo- cratic Convention in July. Whenaask- ed last week abotut Brown's chances of getting the nomination, she smil- ed and replied, "Let's just say it's not locked up." Those confident of a Brown vic- tory in Oregon sit in the "Brown for President" Portland headquarters and describe the governor as a cross See BROWN, Page 6