Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom Cl bP Mit it3au Iai1Q GROSS There's a chance of showers for today. Windy all day, turning colder this evening as showers end. Vol. XCII, No. 19 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 1, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Future of Title IX is up in the air By KENT WALLEY Is Title IX dead or alive? That's a question that may be decided in the next several months, as important decisions are made by the federal government on the law and its interpretation. TITLE IX IS the federal sex discrimination law that covers educational institutions receiving federal assistance. Until recently it has been assumed that the law pertained' to athletics. But power to enforce the law soon may be diluted. One proposal that would *destroy Title IX's impact on athletics is a bill already passed by voice vote in the Senate. It was introduced last June by the Committee on Labor and Human Resources - chaired by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R- Utah). The Hatch proposal hopes to limit Title IX to individual programs at an institution that directly receive federal assistance. According to University athletic director Don Canham, none of the University's athletic programs receive direct federal assistance, although other University programs do. IN A LETTER dated June 5, Hatch stated that the Department of Education expanded the Title IX law beyond Congress' original in- tent. "Though a few courts have held Title IX to be program-specific, striking down regulations which were over-broad, the Department of Edcationrhas continued to try to impose its directives on all of an institution's activities if so much as one of its programs or activities is federally assisted," the letter stated. Last spring several athletic programs, in- cluding the University's, were investigated by the Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights. Of those early investigations, the office has completed four: the University of Akron, the University of Hawaii at Manoa, the University of Bridgeport in Connecticut and Pensacola Junior College in Florida. Recommendations on other investigations are still to come. Another proposal which may threaten Title IX is the review of all federal departments by the Bush Task Force on government regulation. The task force, named for Vice President George Bush, has proposed no changes yet, but the Department of Education under the leadership of Secretary T.H. Bell has changed its procedure for issuing findings of the investigations. BELL CALLS THE new procedure "cooperation before confrontation."' Under Bell's plan, an institution is given an oppor- tunity to present plans for the future and discuss its problems with federal officials before a non-compliance letter is considered. Athletic directors say they like the new method, but add that it tends to make the in- vestigations longer, and raises some questions See FUTURE, Page 6 Dean says tenured faculty can be cut LadIy hoto y KIM HLL Fallen arches niversity workers began moving the last of the corinthian columns located on pioneering unistruct architecture building that stood behind them were originally appan St. next to Lorch Hall to North Campus yesterday. The columns and the built for University architecture students to study. Reagan to OK MX,B-I bomber From AP and UPI other states. " Dakota, 50 by Maelstrom AFB in Mon- selection on the deployment area u By ANDREW CHAPMAN The University administration can fire tenured faculty members if the need arises, LSA Dean Peter Steiner reminded a group of University professors yesterday. Apart from physical disability and incompetence, Steiner said, the University can fire tenured faculty for two reasons. These reasons are: 1) if the University declares it does not have enough money to pay the faculty, and 2) if the faculty :members' department or program is discontinued. STEINER'S REMARKS came at a Michigan League meeting of the local chapter of the American Association of University Professors. Before launching into his speech, Steiner told the professors he was on their side. Unbuttoning his coat, Steiner displayed a T-shirt emblazoned with a superman shield and the letters "AAUP." Getting back to more serious mat- ters, Steiner noted that five of the nine tenured faculty members of the geography department - scheduled to be discontinued July 1 - have not yet been relocated in other University departments. THE NEW DEAN, who until this summer was a professor in the economics department, said he believed he would be able to find other positions for the tenured geography professors, but added that if he cannot,, those professors may. be forced to leave the University. Relocation of the tenured geography faculty hopefully will be announced within the next five months, Steiner said, adding that every effort is being made by the dean's office to place the professors in other positions. Steiner said he is asking chairpersons of various departments whether or not they would be willing to take the tenured geography professors into their departments. The college will pay the salaries of the geography faculty mem- bers if and when the departments ac- cept them, he added. "FIRING TENURED faculty will never be an objective," Steiner said. "Whether it will be a consequence or not, I can't really say." If the tenure issue comes up in the near future, "it will be approached with great caution," Steiner said. The dean said there are no plans ;to,_ discontinue academic programs being made by the administration at this moment, but he added that such plants will be made in the future. Since the University's guidelines concerning the discontinuation of academic departments does not define the size or scope of academic programs, there has been some debate See DEAN, Page 6 ntil WASHINGTON- President Reagan has decided to scatter 100 MX missiles among 1,000 shelters in the West and to build the B-1 bomber while a more ad- vanced, radar-eluding Stealth aircraft is developed, sources said yesterday. A key Senate source, asking anonymity, said he understands Reagan has not settled on which states will house the new generation of nuclear missiles. The possibilities in- clude shuttling them, shell-game fashion, on desert land in Nevada and possibly Utah, or basing some in existing Minuteman missile silos in THE PRESIDENT is to announce those multibillion-dollar decisions tomorrow as he discloses plans to modernize the nation's strategic forces, which he contends have fallen dangerously behind those of the Soviet Union. One thousand vertical Minuteman silos are in North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming. Four hundred of those are large enough to accommodate the MX and would require little modification. Of the 400, 150 are controlled by Grand Forks Air Force Base in North tana and 200 by Francis E. Warren AFB in Wyoming. DELAYING A decision on where to deploy the MX would not necessarily set back the 1986 period when the first of the missiles is scheduled to be in operation, according to an Air Force spokesman, Lt. Col.Mike Terrill. In fact, Terrill said, the Air Force does not expect environmental impact statements on all the areas under con- sideration-Nevada, Utah, Texas and New Mexico-to be completed until next month at the earliest. "We had not planned on making the late November or early December," he said. BUT A DELAY of several months past December could set back the MX schedule becasue of problems with fur- ther environmental studies and land acquisition," Terrill said. "You run into a problem with land withdrawal," . Terrill added. Reagan is expected to go ahead with plans to manufacture the B-1 bomber, which was rejected by then-President Jimmy Carter, and to develop Stealth bombers able to elude enemy radar, the See REAGAN, Page 5 ................ fO ..... .... ................ . . . . . . ..~. ......:.............. ...............;.:. . :'' There's always the next. day, "or the dayatr By JOYCE FRIEDEN The assignment is due in a week and even though you intend to start it right away, two or three days will pass before you actually get around to it. You can almost predict the rest: It's now the night before the due date and you must work feverishly to get the assignment in on time. IF THAT SOUNDS like you, don't worry. Procrastination is a common condition. And resear- chers say procrastination is not necessarily the result of laziness, or lack of discipline and motivation. Students procrastinate, say the experts, because they fear success, they fear failure or because they high school to college, they aren't able to produce things at the level (of excellence) they've been ac- customed to. Having that over your head is in- timidating, and that makes it hard to get started," she added. BURKA AND colleague Lenora Yuen have been running for the last several years clinics on procrastination for students at Berkeley. Fear of failure plays a big role in a student's decision to put off a project. "By procrastinating," Burka said, "they never allow their best work to come to light, to be evaluated." If parents pressure their children to succeed, they will withdraw altogether from being evaluated she added "THERE ARE NO built-in limits to the grounds of being a student," Brunner said. "If you are writing a paper, there is always more research you could have done, always more readings you can do to understand a point further. You could, if you wanted, let studying fill up all your time. Several students had other ideas about why they procrastinate. "I procrastinate when I have no specific structure for my day," said LSA third-term freshman Jeff Walker. "If I know I have five or six hours ahead of me and only one thing to get done, blowing off that first or second hour doesn't seem like a bad thing to do." are rebelling. In addition, said University psychologist Alice WALKER ALSO suggested that his procrastination. "Some people are perfectionists in their mind's Brunner, many students find themselves was the result of his parents' high expectations for eye," said University of California at Berkeley procrastinating because they are overwhelmed by him and his consequent fear of failure. onpsychologist Jane Burka. "Often, once they go from academic pressure. The images people carve out for themselves has ... .., . ... ...._... .. ,. ... :-.. .\... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...:.. . . . . . . . -:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8.. . . .... . . . . . .T.. . . .i .,,... . A.,, :.},. ...>:, , ,. ;} . .r...... . . . ... .. .. .. . . . . . . . ...... ..... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........._....... ..._.......... Y &:,.:. ...e. .,f : :, . . .... . ..._:<.. _ .. ........ .._. .. . . . . . . . . ...... .. .. . } . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 .L. ..,.:: .. :: , ,. :a .t..4.,.. ' T..:a.:. ... . a, . . ;... . . .... . ..... , ) .. . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . a . .....,l.a. ....\...ssa .. \., a. . .L . ... ... ... . . ....% .. . . . . ...... : . . . :.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TODAY Fancy garage sale COME ONE, COME ALL. Uncle Sam is cleaning house and auctioning off what he finds in the federal basement - scores of pricey, garish and gaudy gifts from foreign governments to U.S. officials that they are prohibited by law from keeping. What will you pay for a brass cigar box from Thailand or a silver gilt Russian liquer set? And who will buy the oil por- trait and five busts of former Secretary of State Henry fered to sell them at fair market value to the recipients themselves. This reduced the gift list from about 260 items to 182. The most expensive item, valued by the U.S. gover- nment at $6,000, is a Piaget gold watch, a gift from Oman to Henry Catto when he was chief of protocol. Catto, now chief Defense Department spokesman, said Tuesday he decided not to buy the watch back from the government. "It's very handsome, but unfortunately, a bit expensive for my ex- chequer," he said. His secretary, Alice Parrish, said Catto also had returned a watch given to him by the King of Saudi Arabia. Asked whether Catto planned to purchase that one, ehnvoliA "n nman 11R,, rkn a tnn -.r~A nf- From vandals to thieves Spokane County in Washington state used a heavily van- dalized stop sign to demonstrate how much vandalism costs county taxpayers. But now the sign can be used to demon- strate the cost of theft-if it is recovered. The sign was stolen from an easel on which it was displayed in the county courthouse entrance to show that each stop sign destroyed by vandals costs $93 to replace. County Engineer Robert Turner said Tuesday that the stolen stop sign was not itself worth any more than the value of its metal as scrap. Its true -.r.Ah- o a e - : - ---n+;t nninr wo cn n .-crim v hnlt , night. He said he filed a battery complaint against his at- tacker with the state attorney's office. Witnesses said for- mer city commissioner Farris Tarantino struck Doyens, 25, several times in the face. The editor tried his best to deflect the punches, but did not return the blows, said Henry Cab- bage, a Panama City News-Harold reporter who watched the altercation. Tarantino asked to speak to the editor out- side City Hall, after a City Commission meeting. Tarantino complained about the news coverage in the weekly paper and hit- Doyens in the face, the editor said. Doyens said' Tarantino apparently was upset about a newspaper story that said he resgned his nost on the City Commission in 1979 i I I