Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom E 41 igau LIUIIQt1 eS kP(HAIRN K .rEt Expect a high in the upper 60s. Scattered showers should end by tonight when the mercury drops to 40. ,Vol. XCI. No. 19 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 25, 1980 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages I Spanish prof causes By MARK PARRENT J Because of a professor's admittedly confusing class announcement blasting the pass/fail grading system, more than 1,700 first- and second-year Spanish students will have an extra two days to decide if they want to take their language courses pass/fail. The confusion arose after Spanish teaching assistants read an announcement in class earlier this week that discouraged students from selec- ting the P/F grading format. THE OFFICIAL LSA deadline for making a grading system change was yesterday, but LSA Associate Dean Eugene Nissen said students in Spanish 100, 101, 102, 103, 231, and 232 will have until 4:30 p.m._tomorrow in the LSA counseling center to designatea grading system. The pass/fail option is especially popular, in language classes, which many students take only to fulfill a language proficiency requirement for graduation. Associate Prof. David Wolfe, who is one of two faculty members who oversee the beginning courses, instructed teaching assistants earlier this week to read an anouncement he had draf- ted. WOLFE SAID THE move was designed to en- courage students to take the class under an A-B- C-D-E grading system rather than the P/F system. Under the pass/fail option, the registrar changes C- and better grades to a P while changing Ds and Es to an F. But the wording of the announcement apparen- tly convinced some students that a B average was necessary to obtain a P. "The Spanish Division of the Department of Romance Languages does NOT approve of your taking any 4 or 8 hour Spanish course pass/fail," the announcement began. "The pass/fail system is deceptive and demoralizing." AFTER NOTING that a credit-earning D grade under the pass/fai into a no-credit F, the a you take the pass/fail risl B average in Spanish at al It was this clause that the confusion. Wolfe said he didn't m necessary to pass the clas a good idea to maintain a the term in order to allow at the end of the term. A CLARIFYING staten classes today and tomorri LSA's pass/fail systen those in other University designed for students who credit while relieving som of the course. P or an F, unlike stan no effect on a student's simply determines whet] ted for the class. pass/falcot i system is translated LSA REQUIRES either two years of college nnouncement said, "If language courses or four years of high school k, you must maintain a language classes if a student wishes to graduate 1 times." with a B.S. or A.B. degree. caused the majority of If a student chooses not to fulfill the language requirement, a Bachelor of General Studies nean a B average was degree-for which concentrations are not s, but rather that it was allowed-is the only option. B average throughout Wolfe outlined several reasons for his op- for a poor performance position to the pass /fail system: " "The pass/fail students tend to be non- nent will be read in the contributors to the class," Wolfe said. "They ow, Wolfe said. huddle in the back, they cut. . . It's demoralizing n, which is similar to to the class." schools and colleges, is " "I really get pressure to change grades and I wish to take a class for don't like to do it," Wolfe said. He said students ie of the grade pressure who take the class pass/fail but don't make a grade of C- or better invariably come to him with dard letter grades, has appeals for a grade change. "The students will grade.point average. It come in trembling" and practically begging for her credit will be gran- a C-, he said. See TWO, Page 6 ifusion Wolfe clarifies announcement ato Sbo From The Associated Press BAGHDAD, Iraq-Iraqi armor and infantry - pushed deeper into Iran yesterday, claiming the capture of+ -f three more towns and driving har- " Iliadpressed Iranian troops away from the border. The two Moslem enemies urged k ~their people to fight on in a "holy war." . SnAs a worried world Watched, the "oil war" continued as well. IN WASHINGTON President Carter i said yesterday that an interruption of the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf "would create a serious threat" and the United States is consulting other nations on ways to keep oil supplies from being halted by the war between Y ,FIran and Iraq. Carter, in a brief appearance before APPhreporters at the White House, said the consetations are aimedatensuring that the strategic Strait of Hormuz the 300-pondp e itremains open. Much of the world's oil is a0ofoshipped through that strait. "Freedom of navigation in the Per- sian Gulf is of primary importance to t jwe AP Photo the whale international community," Prete l f or a heif Carter said. "It is imperative that there A huge befr drinker's friend fascinates Laurie Sheeran, -above, who compares be no in frismetofa freom oPr- the 300-pound pretzel to its smaller counterpart. Ingredients for the record passageuf sist n rmtePr pastry included 200 pounds of flour, 60 pounds of water and 10 pounds of butter, siaB ufTregPioEneae hs FACULTY 'SCURRYING' TO LEARN RULES: Marwl case a lesson move deeper rarnan terri assurance that the United States is staying out of the fighting between Iran and Iraq and cautioned other nations to do the same. He again denied Iranian charges that the United States is spon- soring the Iraqis in the war. "Although the United States is in no way involved in this dispute and charges to the contrary are obviously and patently false, it is important to make clear our position in this mat- ter . .," Carter said. "There should be absolutely no intervention by any other nation in this conflict." Meanwhile, Secretary of State Ed- mund Muskie also revealed the ad- ministration is planning strategy to keep oil flowing from the Persian Gulf. He stressed that current U.S. policy is to promote a ceasefire through the United Nations. "I THINK THIS is the kind of situation best addressed through an in- ternational institution of this kind," Muskie told reporters after returning to the United Nations in New York from a White House meeting called to consider the Middle East conflict: He said the first priority is to seek implementation of an appeal issued by the Security Council urging Iran and Iraq to cease fighting. Muskie said he would urge Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to recommend the Kremlin use its in- fluence in support of the Security Coun- cil's appeal. IN THE MIDEAST, flights of U.S.- made Iranian fighter-bombers and flotillas of gunboats attacked Iraqi oil installations for a third day, and Tehran said far-ranging Iraqi war- planes had attacked Iran's giant Kharg Island oil terminal. The important Iranian refinery at Abadarr was repor- ted still burning, two days after Iraqi warplanes and artillery began bom- barding it. The Persian Gulf oil shipment facilities of both nations were reported shut down. Military observers said the Iraqis apparently were trying to cut off Iran's major oil centers in the south from the capital of Tehran. But Iraqi Defense Minister Gen. Adnan Khairallah told reporters yesterday his country had no intention of seizing the oil-rich Khuzestan province in southwestern Iran. "YOU KNOW VERY well we are not in need of oil from Arabistan," Khairallah aid, using the Arab world's name for Khuzestan. tor President Saddam Hussein's gover- nment repeatedly has charged Iran with oppressing thev rights of the Arabic-speaking minority in the province, which numbers more than one million of the three million inhabitants. Baghdad also has repor- tedly given arms aid to separatist rebels in the area. Khairallah reiterated his gover- nment's accusation that Iranian violations of a 1975 territorial agreement prompted the border war. "We wanted to hold Iran by the neck until they recognized our legitimate rights," he said. IRANIAN REINFORCEMENTS were being rushed to the flashpoint areas along the 300-mile war front, Tehran Radio said. The beleaguered defenders of the Iranian oil-refinery city of Abadan apparently were holding out doggedly against an Iraqi siege,. .The Iraqis claimed to have captured at least three more Iranian towns in the central border region 350 miles south- west of Tehran. Iran's government conceded its forces had made tactical withdrawals. The Iranians asserted that four Americans, whom they did not identify, were captured with Iraqi soldiers in the border fighting north of Abadan,. Blue blood 5 carry on parents' 'U' tradition By HOWARD WITT A Daily News Analysis When Harold Shapiro was just another professor in the economics department, he "never knew if (the department) even had a grievance procedure.". He also had only a "vague idea",of the definition of a tenure review. TODAY, HAROLD SHAPIRO is president of the University. And those days of blissful naivete on the part of the faculty are gone for good. If terms like "tenure review," "grievance procedure," and "non- reappointment" were not every day' jargon among faculty members before Jonathan Marwil sued the University, they almost certainly will be now. Marwil, a former assistant professor 1 in the engineering humanities depar- tment, lost his long struggle for a review of his qualifications to receive tenure Tuesday, when a federal district judge in Detroit dismissed his suit against the Regents and three humanities department ad- ministrators. MARWIL, WHO HAS been off the University payroll since May, 1979, claims he was unfairly denied a tenure review in his sixth year at the Univer- sity-a review many faculty members regard as customary in a professor's sixth year. Humanities department admin- sitrators claim Marwil - was "abrasive," "contentious," and "in-. temperate," and contend they were justified in terminating his contract because he was a divisive influence in the department. Marwil took his case for a tenure review to the dean of the engineering. college, the faculty's grievance board, then-Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Shapiro, the Regents, and finally federal district court, picking up sup- port from fellow faculty members along the way. NOW, FACULTY leaders are trying to assess what went wrong with the University's grievance procedure and how to avoid another case like Mar- wil's, which they believe never should have gone outside the University. "I wish we had found a better way to dispose of (Marwil's) case than we did," said History Prof. Shaw Liver- more, chairman of the Senate Advisory Review Committee, the faculty's grievance body. SARC, which most faculty members consider virtually im- potent because it has only advisory powers, had unanimously supported Marwil in his quest for a tenure review. The chairman of the faculty's executive committee put it more blun- tly. "We don't have in place enough of a grievance procedure to prevent falling into a similar trap," said Engineering Prof. Arch Naylo-r', chairman of the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs. SHAPIRO COULD scarcely disagree more with Naylor's assessment. In an interview conducted in July while Marwil's trial was in progress, Shapiro said, "We have all kinds of grievance procedures even if SARC dropped out of existence. If we err anywhere, we err in most cases on the side of too many See MARWIL, Page 6 By ANNE GADON Michigan students are often accused of harboring a fanatical devotion towards the University. Five students stand as proof that this maize-and-blue attraction may even be passed on genetically. Karil, Kent, Kirsten, Lee, and Sandra Kochenderfer. of Royal Oak, are all children of Music School Alumni Nancy and Vincent Kochenderfer. And all five are curren- tly enrolled in the University as undergraduates. Although Mom and Dad Kochenderfer say they never pressured their offspring to attend the University, fresh- man Kent recalls wearing a "Go Blue" bib in his toddler days, and 21 year-old Karil, a senior studying consumer research, remembers that "as kids we were always dressed in Michigan stuff." EACH OF THE KOCHENDERFERS listed the school's "superb academics" as a reaon for choosing the Univer- sity. Sandra, 23, who transferred to Michigan from Kalamazoo College claimed she was searching for a larger school and felt "oriented towards Michigan." Before any of the children were of college age, the family took frequent trips'to Ann Arbor to attend concerts at Hill Auditorium (a favorite pasttime of their Music School days), football games, and Band Days, the latter as part of Mr. Kochenderfer's job as music director of a suburban Detroit high school. Football Saturdays provide an opportunity for the whole family to get gether. The four elder Kochenderfers have tickets together on the 45 yard line. Father Kochenderfer especially enjoys this. "I never got such a good seat during my days at Michigan," he said. THE FAMILY MUSICAL tradition is carried on by Karil and Kirsten, who are both members of Choral Union, a campus singing group. The senior Kochenderfers also belonged to Choral Union during their undergraduate years at the University. Mrs. Kochenderfer fondly recalls, "My husband and I dated through musical events and our participation in musical groups." This harmonious romance resulted in- their marriage at the time of their graduation in 1949. Having siblings at the University apparently has academic advantages. Karil and Kent are both taking Astronomy 101 this term. "I have Kent take notes for me when I want to skip class," Karil said. The Kochenderfer children spend their summers working to earn the bulk of the money needed to pay college expenses. The family also receives financial aid from the state of Michigan via BEOG, the Michigan Competitive Scholar- ship, the College Work Study Program, and other scholar- ships. "BY THE TIME WE were juniors in high school we all See MAIZE, Page 8 TODAY- The old rugged archesk T O SOME PERSONSy there is nothing more heavenly than a quarter-pounder with cheese, a large order of fries, and a medium-sized soft drink in a Ronald McDonald glass. This isn't the case with a group of outraged Vero Beach, Fla. clergy- Mani A lrwn] rildinna tha~t has nlaol chrh rosses inf R The times they are a-changmn A Ten years ago former Yippie leader Jerry Rubin urged his college-aged followers to tear the a American capitalist system down, and was lauded by Cheers. many for doing so. Six years: applauding enthisiasts of the same ago. Liddy earned the kudos at the close of a two-hour "dialog" with 1,600 Univer- sity of Massachusetts students in Amherst, Mass. The Watergate figure alternately cajoled and charmed the group as he warned against criticism of the late FBI Direc- tor J. Edgar Hoover, lectured on the technique of knife- fighting, and lamented theAmerican tendency "to live a life of illusion." Just moments away at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., Rubin told students to make capitalism work for better social values. He also told the group not to smoke too much marijuana. The former activist, who Atlantic Ridley turtle. Officials of the New England Aquarium say that Studley is in for a round-trip, all- expense-paid airline ticket to Florida where he will be met by two females of the rare and vanishing species. Studley will also enjoy first class accommodations at the Miami Seaquarium. The lucky turtle ,will stay "for an indefinite period of time" in the lavish "Lost World" exhibit which replicates the Key Biscayne area of Florida (prior to its massive tourist development). Aquarium officials hope that Studley will be enamored with the two lovely turtles-m- waiting, with little Atlantic Ridleys resulting from the ,I i