'U sports probe may define Title IX Editor's note: Daily reporters Sara Anspach and Kent Walley researched and wrote the following series of articles on the Department of Education 's investigation of the University's athletic department. The department budget and related stories are on pages S and 6. A team of federal investigators arrived on campus yesterday to deter- mine whether the University Athletic Department discriminates against athletes on the basis of sex. The investigation-one of the first of its kind in the country-may help set a precedent for the interpretation of the anti-sex discrimination law, Title IX. The University is one of eight schools currently under investigation. These eight are among 80 schools which have had one or more sex discrimination complaints filed against their athletic departments since Title IX became law eight years ago., THE REVIEW of the University is especially significant because the Education department investigation could. set precedents University has a large, complex athletic department and is a member of the Big Ten conference, noted Office of Civil Rights Regional Director Kenneth Mines. Eventually every school which has ' had a complaint filed against it will be investigated by the Department of Education. The on-going reviews will help set compliance and non- compliance standards for every federally-assisted college or university in the country. Four complaints alleging sex discrimination have been filed against the University in the eight years Title IX has been law. The most recent was a 1979 complaint by women's track team members Blaise Supler and Sheila Mayberry alleging multiple violations of the law. INVESTIGATORS from the Office of Civil Rights will be on campus for at least one week interviewing coaches, administrators, and students. They will be taking a look at the Athletic Depar- tment's written policies and will be examining data such as expenditure figures, participant-coach ratios, facilities provided to men's and women's teams, and a host of other areas in which discrepancies could oc- cur. When the on-site investigation is finished, the Office of Civil Rights will begin analyzing the data. The office has 90 days from the date the investigation started to issue a finding of either com- pliance or non-compliance. If the University is found in non- compliance it will have 90 days to devise a corrective plan. A school that refuses to comply with Title IX could eventually have its federal funds discontinued. UNTIL NOW no one has determined precisely what Title IX requires in in- tercollegiate athletic programs. There is a long history of non-compliance with the law because neither athletic depar- tments nor federal officials have un- derstood how to interpret it. Two years after Title IX became law, Congress passed an amendment which required HEW to prepare proposed regulations to implement the provisions of Title IX including, with respect to in- tercollegiate athletics, "reasonable provisions considering the nature of particular sports." At that time there was much debate See 'U,' Page 5 / 4 SNOW Ninety-One Years ~ ~ Cloudy with rain and snow Of1 ending this afternoon. High of k~l.in the low 40s, partial clear- F ditorial Freedom ing and colder tonight with a low in upper 20s. ' *Vol. XC; No. 47 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 28, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages GM~ loss. worst in *A merican corporate hi'story DETROIT (UPI)-General Motors Corp. reported a third quarter loss 0 yesterday of $567 million, apparently the largest quarterly deficit in U.S. corporate history. ,iat figure tops what is believed to be the previous worst quarterly financial performance by an American firm-a $561.7 million deficit by U.S. Steel Corp. in the fourth quarter of 1979. GM'S IDOSSES for the, year now amount to $824 million. The No. 1 automaker was the first to, announce results of a third quarter ex- pected to outstrip the disastrous second quarter of 1980 in overall industry red ink. In a statement, GM Chairman Thomas Murphy and President Elliott Estes said the giant automaker "will continue to experience reduced profitability until the economy and automotive. retail sales improve to more normal levels." THEY SAID economic indicators now are pointing to the recovery GM and other auto firms need to regain profitability. "These emerging signs of an im- proving economy, together with our continuing achievement of cost reduc- tions, suggest that we can expect more favorable results in 1981. "We have weathered the worst. Recovery, although gradual, has begun." In the first half of 1980, U.S. automakers lost a combined $1.96 billion with each company showing historic deficits. Only Chrysler Corp. has said it expects to trim losses in the normally low-profit third quarter, although it will still post a substantial deficit. GM HAD PROFITS in the third quar- ter last year of $22 million. The decline in earnings was at- tributed to sharply reduced sales, par- ticularly in high-profit car and truck lines and continuing increased tooling costs, along with inflation and other costs increases it couldn't recover through price hikes. GM worldwide dollar sales in the third quarter slumped to $12 billion, down 10 percent from $13.3 billion in the same period last year. I ise prep ares to battle Shapiro By KEVIN TOTTIS Tax cut crusader Robert Tisch met with attorneys yesterday to prepare for legal battle with some ardent critics of his Proposal D-including University President Harold Shapiro. "Bob Tisch feels there are unquestionable violations of several laws," Bill McMasters, a spokesman for Tisch said. McMASTERS did not specify whether Tisch would sue Shapiro, but said both Shapiro and Wayne State University. President Thomas Bonner would be named in the legal action. The Tisch for- ces plan to go to court today pnd then make an official announcement regar- ding legal proceedings. Last week, Shapiro sent a newsletter to members of the University com- munity predicting the effects of the Tisch proposal on the University would be devastating. According to McMasters, under the Michigan Campaign Finance Act of 1972, any person who spends more than $200 on a campaign must register and file reports with the Secretary ofState. "Dr. Shapiro filed nothing," he said. "THE SECRETARY of state is em- powered to require filing," he added. "We will ask that the secretary of state enforce the law that he is required to uphold." However, McMasters said, Tisch and his attorneys do not expect Secretary of State Richard Austin to follow through with this. "If the secretary doesn't act and damage (to the pro-Tisch campaign) continues," he said, "it would be a lawsuit." BUT AS University General Counsel Roderick Daane interprets the law, it, does not apply to Shapiro. "I think that (the law)' is applicable (only) to candidates for office. (But) I. think it is unnecessary" (in this case), Daane explained. McMasters said Bonner and Shapiro together are being considered for legal action. Any decisions would then affect other "presidents of state institutions" who have participated in "part of a million dollar campaign" against the Tisch proposal. He alleged that the presidents made use of "state suppor- tive services," including cars and salaried people. . ANOTHER LEGAL avenue the Tisch people are considering, McMasters said, is a protest of anti-Proposal D ad- vertisements on television and radio. "The ads are misleading and decep- tive," he said, and asked they be removed from the air waves. Shapiro is involved in these ads, Mc- Masters said, because the information used in information that Shapiro has used. "When Dr. Shapiro says there will be a 60 percent cut in state spending he is not telling the truth," McMasters said. SHAPIRO SAID he did not say there will be a 60 percent cut in state spen- ding, but a 60 percent cut in the state's general fund. And "I don't think it (the idea of a cut in the general fund) originated with me," he added. McMasters said the ads are paid for by the Save Our State Committee, and said the University is a member of that committee. But Shapiro said the University is not a member. "If we are, no one told me," he said. McMasters said that while Tisch and his attorneys have not decided exactly which legal route they will take, they will choose the one "where we can have the greatest impact in the shortest time." Proposal D, if approved by, voters on Nov. 4, would cut property taxes in half and require the state to make up the lost revenues to local governments. Both Shapiro and Bonner have come out strongly against the proposal war- ning that tuitions would double or triple to replace state revenues that would be lost under the proposal. Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY BUILT IN 1866, this house at 311 E. Ann St. still has its original woodwork and classical French windows. Hi'*stori:chome on display By KIM JOSE The old beer vaults are being tran- sformed into offices and a nearby pond that once supplied ice to cool the liquor is now tapped by a local company for commercial use, but the old Northern Brewery on Jones Drive still resembles the booming operation it was at the end of the 19th century. Now designated an Ann Arbor Historic District, the Northern Brewery was one of eight historic buildings displayed on the Second Annual Greenhill Ann Arbor home tour Sunday. The tour is sponsored annually to raise money for Greenhill School student scholar- ships. M THE BREWERY is now owned by local architects Dick Fry and Dave Peters who are remodeling the building into an apartment-office complex, complete with a courtyard and gardens. Although it is not yet finished, the red brick walls-remnants of the Brewery's past-still are partially coated with the dirt accumulated from 1922 to 1972 when the building served as the Ann Arbor Foundry. But upstairs, the brick enhances the already-completed design of the Fry-Peters offices. Harris Hall, at the corner of East Huron and North State Street, another Ann Arbor historic site, was visited during the tour. The hall was the brainchild of the Rev. Samuel Harris, who, back in 1883, was con- cerned that Darwin's "revolutionary" theories were tur- ning students away from the church. The Hall today houses the offices of its owners, Buckheim and Rowland, See LOCAL, Page 12 Faculty committee to examine possible program reductions By MAURA CARRY In response to President Shapiro's request for a "smaller" University, members of the faculty executive board yesterday discussed the formation of a University-wide committee for determining which programs and units would be cut or reduced. Prof. Arch Naylor, chairman of the faculty Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs, said program discontinuance is a "problem of reallocation of resources," and that University administrators have indicated that they want to begin moving toward retrenchment "rather quickly" due to extreme financial conditions. IT MUST BE decided whether a new committee should be formed, who the members would be, and whether the com- mittee's role would be more than advisory to the vice President for Academic Affairs, Naylor said. SACUA members also discussed their ideas for a com- mittee with Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye during a closed meeting yesterday. A CENTRALIZED REVIEW committee to determine where to make departmental cuts was one proposal. SACUA member Prof. Jesse Gordon pointed out that such a committee would be unique because its members would have to be very familiar with every department in the Univer- sity. This would present a time problem for any faculty' member appointed to the committee, Gordon said. Naylor said the individual departments could draw up their own plans for cutting back, and then present them to the central committee for approval. This plan may not work since most departments do not feel any of their pro- grams should be eliminated, Naylor said. See PROFS, Page 9 a TODAY Manure bowl? THINK THE spirit of practical jokism is to be anonymous," said the person who claims to have perpetrated the prank when asked to reveal his name. The fellow claims that sometime before the annual mudbowl game was played at the SAE house Saturday, he and two friends dumped over 100 pounds of "highest grade cow manure, no impurities or hay added" on or about the center of the playing field. The caller said that he and his friends all Universitv students. whether anything was dumped at all. Calvin Trim, who was. the announcer for the game said yesterday he was "almost positive" that there was nothing dumped on the playing field, although he said some "tar or chlorine" was dumped there last year. What's his reaction if some practical jokester did dump manure? "If he thinks that's funny, I guess different strokes for different folks . . ." E Political indigestion If you see a lot of people hanging around South Quad's Dining Room 4 tonight they aren't waiting for leftovers, -0- ...w t. nnmet + htR2h. " ~tM.." his way to Cleveland for the nationally televised debate with Ronald Reagan were given Chinese fortune cookies, each bearing a Reagan quotation that Carter likes to ridicule. Each cookie was wrapped in a small bag bearing a label that read "Reagan says fortune cookie." It was decorated with a drawing of the Republican presidential nominee-his eyes made to look Oriental-who was depic- ted as saying "A simple solution in every cookie." "The federal government will not allow companies to run their mines without a mandated safety course. . . This abusive power demands corrective action," said one of the cookie slips. attributing the statement to Reagan in Februarv 1979. Classy counting At last. The perfect gift for those sophisticated engineering types who have everything: the designer calculator. Pierre Cardin, designer of no small repute, now markets not only clothes but, according to his press packet, "a collection of environment electronic accessories," or, in simple English, calculators. Gold plated and stamped with the Pierre Cardin signature, the calculators are touted by Cardin as "high fashion environmental electronics" and "precision products to satisfy the aesthetic business and trniJ nPc gif ic of iand .nm.. 'n h,- 'in,,n fr Cic I I i