::.4:.1 18A - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSWednesday - September 3, 1997 INJUSTICE OR INSECURITY? 0 Title IX leaves mixed feelings By Chris Farah Daily Sports Writer Faces, names, hopes. People. After sifting through all the laws, all the docu- ments, all the arguments and all the technicalities, thats what gender equity in athletics really comes dowin to - people. Brian Lishawa and Ashley Andersen are two peop for whom gender equity policy has meant verydifferent things. Lishawa is the vice president of the Michigan men's club soccer team and will begin his senior year today. His graduation next May guarantees he will nbver benefit from a varsity men's soccer pro- gramat Michigan - primarily because the addi- tion of men's soccer to the varsity program would increase the disparity between men and women athl s. "Its definitely frustrating" Lishawa said. "It's a popular sport, and there's no ideological reason not to (make it varsity). I know I won't be here if it ever is made varsity, but I just want to see it var- A brief history of Title IX N 1972: Title IX passes. 1979: 'Three-pronged test" for college athletics added. 8 1997: In April, the Supreme Court refus- es to hear further arguments on Cohen v. Brown University, upholding the three pronged test, sity for my love of the sport." Andersen, however, comes from a much differ- ent perspective. The recent graduate was a mem- ber of the Michigan women's varsity crew team - a program that just concluded its first year of var- sity status at Michigan, thanks primarily to the influence of Title IX of the Federal Educational Amendments, passed in 1972. "Before, if you said you were on the crew team, people said, 'The what?"' Andersen said. "That's happening less. Crew, in general, is getting more recognition because more crew teams across the country are going varsity - men's and women's.' But men's crew is not becoming a varsity sport at Michigan, or at many schools across the nation. Partly because of Title IX, men's varsity soccer and crew may not become a reality at Michigan. Title IX states that no "person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance." The original Title IX, in 1972, didn't regulate college athletics as part of its mandate, but the Policy Interpretation added in 1979 by the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights instituted a three-pronged test to determine whether federally funded educational institutions live up to government standards of gender equity. Schools can meet Title IX requirements by meet- ing only the first of the three conditions. This does- n't always apply for the last two areas, however, which are arguably more subjective than the first. The first and most important part of the test requires an institution to demonstrate that the ratio of male to female athletes is approximately equwl to the ratio of male to female students. The second requirement states that the school must "show a history and continuing practice" of trying to respond to "the developing interests and abilities" of the underrepresented sex. The final stipulation asks the school to demon- strate "that the interests and abilities of the mem- bers of that sex have been fully and effectively accommodated." In order to meet the proportionality require- ment, Michigan has moved two women's teams from club to varsity status in the last three years: women's crew, as well as women's soc- cer, which got its start as a varsity program in the fall of 1994. Aside from these additions, however, there are some who have been left behind; teams like men's club soccer and men's club crew have not been granted varsity status. According to Senior Associate Athletic Director Keith Molin, they will not be given varsity status any time soon. "If (men's) soccer and men's crew were to be elevated now to varsity status, then you would have to add additional women's sports to keep equity numbers even'" Molin said. "The making of women's soccer and crew varsity sports created opportunities for women student-athletes which did not previously exist and moved our numbers into balance without taking away opportunities that were already there." Michigan has outdone other programs in the race for gender equity simply by not removing men's varsity sports already in place. Many pro- grams, including Michigan State and Syracuse, have balanced the numbers of their men and women athletes by cutting men's sports like lacrosse and wrestling. In fact, Michigan has outdone many schools in the achievement of gender equity itself. USA Today reported that, in the 1995-96 school year, 40 percent of Michigan's student- athletes were women, compared to 49 percent of the student body. In comparison, the national average of women athletes in Division I schools is a much lower 34 percent, according to The New York Times. Michigan men's soccer coach Steve Burns said his argument for varsity status centers around soc- cer's popularity, not the gender-equity issue. According to the Soccer Industry Council of America, the state of Michigan ranks eighth nationally in soccer participation, and soccer is Michigan's fastest growing men's high school sport. "I'm fully in favor of women getting their due," Burns said. "If you're only going to have 1I1 sports, if you're a state-funded institution, you should rI MARGARET MYERS/ ady, Mari Hoff, a member of the Michigan women's soccer team, competes against Indiana In a Sept. 29, 19A6 tc h Wmaccc hena tcnrt In 1CA .1.1,/ Iuau~u. vv~u~I ~ ,ua~~u vaI~J~' ivomaim .women s soccer oecame a varsi y spo look at what your constituency plays at the high school level - you have to read those trends in sports in our society." On the other hand, Michigan men's club crew coach Gregg Hartsuff feels government rules that may hamper men's athletics - while helping pro- mote the rights of women athletics - are unfair to teams like men's club crew. "For me, with women's crew, there's been a good side and a bad side," Hartsuff said. "The good side is that rowing has gotten more support. (The bad side is) I believe there are more men out there interested in competing in intervarsity athlet- ics than there are women." Another argument by those who disagree with Title IX's determination of gender equality revolves around the effect football has on the men- women athlete ratio. The Michigan football team enlists upwards of 100 players - enough for four men's or women's soccer teams. Cecil Pryor, a former Michigan football player and alumnus who also sits on the committee of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics in charge of reviewing the case of men's soccer, said he doesn't think football should count in meeting the standards of prong one of Title IX. "I don't think football should be included in the rI In . numbers," Pryor said. "Not because I'm a forme, football player, but because football is the bread and butter that pays for everything." Proponents of Title IX emphasize gender equi- ty on a larger scale - that equality is less about the interest of individual sports than about provid- ing female athletes with as much opportunity on the varsity scale as men have always possessed. Michigan women's crew coach Mark Rothstein said that, although he wants crew to advance as a sport, women should be considered first. "I don't think it's unfair," Rothstein said. "Obviously, I would love to see men's crew become a varsity sport. But across America, there's still a lot more opportunity for high school boys than high school girls to participate at the col- lege level." Opinions on Title IX and gender equity are as far-ranging as the personalities of those involved in the debate. Arguments on the topic are often heated, which isn't surprising, considering its sen- sitivity. With an issue as loaded as gender equity, only one thing seems perfectly clear: When passion,- are on the line, when a Brian Lishawa or an Ashley_ Andersen loves soccer or crew for the sole sake of- playing the sport, there really can be no clear FILE PHOTO/Daily Metes soccer at the University remains a club sport, not a varsity sport. This upsets many sup- porters of the men's soccer program. FOOTBALL Continued from Page 13A compete for the starting fullback posio tion after a successful freshman season. In a statement, Carr stressed that it was Anes' decision to leave school and was not a disciplinary action of any, kind. The loss of Anes means true freshman Demetrius Smith will proba- bly back up starter Chris Floyd. There is also some uncertainty on the offensive line, where the. Wolverines must do without three starters from a year ago. Car announced last week that redshirt freshman Jeff Backus will move to left tackle, fifth-year senior Zach Adami to center and sophomore Chris Ziemann to right guard. Redshirt freshman Steve Hutchinson gets the nod at left guard and junior Jop Jansen stays put at right tackle': Inserting Ziemann: into the starting lineup leaves sophomore Steve Frazier on the bench. And while three spots in the defend sive backfield are locked up - All- America selection Charles Woodson at one corner position and Marcus Ray- and Daydrion Taylor as the safeties - there is intense competition at strong- side cornerback, a hot spot for oppos- ing quarterbacks throwing away from Woodson. Redshirt freshman Le'Aundre Brown left school after falling two spots on the depth chart, leavinj junior Andre Weathers and true fresh- man James Whitley in a heated battle for the job. Woodson, who started all but one of Michigan's games as a freshman, said Whitley "has bett" skills than I did when I was a fres man. - Kunos: It's official: CharleIau Woodson is a two-way star. T Heisman Trophy hopeful is sure to the front-runner to win the Jim Tho Award, given annually to the natio top defensive back. But last week Woodson, who caud 13 passes last year for the Wolverin4% was announced as a finalist for the Fra Biletnikoff Award, which goes to t, nation's best receiver. Junior receivn Tai Streets joins Woodson as a final for the Biletnikoff Award. CLASS OF 1998: Defensive E Dave Armstrong -of Doylestown, P. generally considered one of the bes players at his position, announced last week that he will attend Michigan. ' - Armstrong, a 6-4, 255-pounder who can run a 4.7-second 40-yard daswh; went to the same high school #3 Michigan senior Rob Swett. Armactrnna i the sventh nlaver tr'