The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 30-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 16, 1976 Ten Cents Twelve Pages SMALL GAINS FOR WOMEN A ffirmative action: Limited attempt By LAURIE YOUNG Second in a Five Part Series "Although administrators may be more tolerant and accepting of new women's roles," said Nellie Varner, Associate Dean of Rackham Graduate School and former Affirmative Action Officer, "it is doubtful w h e t h e r actual attitudinal changes have occurred." Though it may seem that people are more aware of sex discrimination prob- lems at the University today, the Af- firmative Action program has yielded only minor statistical changes. BUT NEWLY appointed Affirmative Action Officer Prof. Gwendolyn Baker has faith in the affirmative action pro- gram at the University despite the grim statistical picture. Working through the Affirmative Ac- tion Office, set up in the aftermath of an HEW sex discrimination investiga- tion in 1970, Baker is responsible for the Commission for Women and the Com- mission for Minorities and acts as a liaison with federal agencies. The Office on the whole counsels over a hundred individuals, initiates policy changes and issues annual progress reports. "Attitudes about sex discrimination have to change," says Baker optimistic- ally. "How rapidly the changes occur depends on many factors." She cites positions available, attitudes of search committees and administrators, and the economic climate at the University as some of those critical factors. "IF WE CAN get the whole purpose and processes of affirmative action in- volved and integarted into the hiring and promotion processes, if we get more than written or verbal commitments, this is when discrimination practices will stop," she said. Still, the statistics do not reflect any major changes. In 1973, the University employed 4.6 per cent female full pro- fessors, and today the figure has risen to 5.1 per cent. The slight increases have occurred however, primarily in tradi- tional areas such as Education and Social Work. "The affirmative action program does not represent any pressure on discrim- ination practices at the University. There are no changes in the administrative stance," complained one administrative staff member. "The affirmative action program is what the University is doing instead of doing anything. It is good if a depart- ment wants to hire a woman or minor- ity, but there is no penalty for those who don't," she added. FOR EXAMPLE, Natural Resources Prof. Peter Sandman relates a story about his wife, Susan, who at one time applied to a number of different depart- ments at the University. She was told she didn't have the proper experience for the respective jobs, yet she was con- sistently asked to fill out cards indicating she had applied and has been considered See AFFIRMATIVE, Page 10 Arabs set new Lebanon truce BEIRUT, Lebanon (A')-Secretary-General Mah- moud Riad of the Arab League claimed yesterday he has persuaded Lebanon's Christian leaders to accept a peace force from several Arab nations to end the 14-month civil war. Premier Abdel Salem Jalloud of Libya, also here to negotiate the pan-Arab intervention, said over the Moslem-held television that Syria had pledged to pull its estimated 12,500 troops back into eastern Lebanon but would remain in the country until a peace settlement was reached' between warring Christians and Moslems. THE ANNOUNCEMENTS came as Syrian tanks and troops tightened their stranglehold on Leb- anon's cities and ports in a drive to bring Leban- on's Moslem leftists and their Palestinian allies to their knees. In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin told his parilament Israel could be threat- ened "if Lebanon loses its independence and falls victim to the terrorist organizations and their allies, or is trampled under Syrian rule." "President Suleiman Franjieh agreed after I provided him with explanations and assurances on Lebanon's sovereignty and independence and the necessity of consulting with the Lebanese government on arrangements to carry out the plan," Riad told reports after meeting with Fran- jieh and other top Christian leaders outside Beirut. RIAD TRAVELED to Lebanon after three days of coosultations in Damascus with Syrian Presi- dent IHafezeAsad. Jalloud, accompanied by Fatah guerrilla field commander Abu Ayad, had pushed the disputed proposal with President-elect Elias Sarkis, a Christian, in a meeting near the no-man's land between Moslem and Christian camps in Beirut. The proposal ao dispatch a pan-Arab force to Lebanon was made at an emergency meeting of Arab foreign ministers in Cairo last week. Chris- tian leaders had said they would resist any out- side troops other than Syria's intervening in Lebanon's 14-month civil war. FORMER PRESIDENT Camille Chamoun, speaking also for Phalange party leader Pierre Gemayel, said the Christian camp will accept the peacekeeping force only under "certain conli- tions and reservations." Chamoun, who joined Franjieh and Gemayel for the talks with Riad, did not specify. the con- ditions, but they were believed to include a pledge that non-Syrian forces would not patrol Christian- held territory. " Franjieh, as usual, said nothing. Riad said he was heading back to Damascus immediately, leaving further negotiations with the leftist Mos- fir lem camp to Jalloud. RABIN SAID in Jerusalem that "we are fol- lowing developments alertly, the army is on guard." Like other Israeli spokesmen before him, he would not spell out the conditions and factors that would trigger Israeli intervention in the - 1 Lebanese conflicts. "The factions at work in Lebanon are well aware what moves and circumstances on Leban- y on's soil will be seen by us as a new and intoler- ' A able situation for Israel's security," he said. Gasoline and other essentials grew scarcer in Beirut as the Syrian forces sealed off all supply ', routes to the capital.,f.--~ DIPLOMATIC sources said Syrian tanks on hills overlooking Sidon, 25 miles south of Beirut, -r were shelling ships approaching the port, pre- venting arrival of supplies. Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Similar blockades were reported at the ports of Tyre, 26 miles south of Sidon, and Tripoli, 60 miles north of Beirut. With Syrian troops con- trolling Beirut airport and highways leading As if yesterday's heat weren't enough, these two competitors north, east and south, the capital was in a state insisted on contributing to their own osmosis with a furious of siege. game of one-on-one basketball outside East Quad. Dem. committee approves platform WASHINGTON I) - The Demo- cratic party's platform committee yesterday night overwhelmingly ap- proved a campaign platform that gives Jimmy Carter essentially what he asked for -- a noncontroversial document likely to rally the party behind him. The platform, still subject to final approval at the party's national con- vention in New York in July, calls for establishment of national health insurance, minimum-income guaran- tees for poor Americans, a plan for a return to full employment and a strong U. S. defense posture. THE PLATFORM committee fin- ished work on the 90-page document one day earlier than scheduled, and Carter's chief representative here said it shows the Democratic party is more united now than it has been since 1960, when it nominated John Kennedy for president. "This is a Democratic party docu- ment, not a Jimmy Carter docu- ment," said Stuart Eizenstat, who directed the Carter forces at the com- mittee. It was clear that delegates on both the left and right spectrum of the party had compromised in order to draw up a platform they hoped would appeal to all Democrats, whose party has a majority in the country. EIZENSTAT told reporters after the meeting ended: "We are proud and pleased with the party; it has come a long way in four years." "These are not only progressive goals, but meaningful goals and rea- listic goals," he said. However, the platform says little about how the programs it recom- mends will be paid for, or even how much they will cost. Mas- sachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, who was instrumental in its prepara- ration, put an overall price tag on the programs of $30 billion except for national health insurance, where he declined to make an estimate. See DEM., Page 10