Metro ON THE COVER Instilling Hope from page A15 place for kids, and second as hope for their child. Everything's about college!' UPA currently serves 1,225 students, spread over three New Center area campuses in the shadow of the Fisher Building. His goal over the next decade is to help create 20-25,000 tuition-free, viable K-12 opportunities in Detroit. Although the buildings are funded by the Thompson Educational Foundation and leased to UPA for $1 a year, "I get the same $7,400 per pupil as DPS," Ross says. "Our (teacher) pay scale is roughly the same. We pay a little more for beginning teachers. There's some sense of mission!" Principal Chalita Middleton with Doug Ross A Well-Examined Life Who: Douglas (Doug) Ross, co-founder and superintendent, University Preparatory Academy, Detroit Resides: Birmingham Education: Born in Detroit. Graduated Mumford High School, the University of Michigan (bachelor's degree, his- tory) and Princeton University (master's degree, public affairs). During and between degrees, taught in the Detroit Public Schools and worked stints for U.S. Rep. John Dingell, D-Dearborn, and Sen. Joseph Tydings, D-Maryland. "I haven't led a very stable life." Getting started politically: Served as field director for then-Michigan Attorney General Frank Kelley's 1972 unsuc- cessful bid for U.S. Senate. Headed Michigan Citizens' Lobby, a consumer taxpayer group responsible for get- ting rid of the state sales tax on food and medicine, for Michigan having the first generic prescription law in the country and for the law mandating companies to stand behind faulty cars, known as the Lemon Law. Elected to state Senate representing southern Oakland County (1978). Lost to now-U.S. Rep. Sandy Levin, D-Royal Oak, in 1982 primary for U.S. Congress. From Michigan to D.C. and back: Served in Blanchard administration, starting up the Michigan Youth Corps and as Michigan commerce director. Moved family in 1989 to Washington, D.C., to become CEO of the non-profit Corporation for Enterprise Development where "I got involved with then-Gov. Bill Clinton." After running Clinton's 1992 primary campaign in Michigan, was appointed by President Clinton as U.S. Assistant Secretary of Labor for Employment and Training (1993-95). "I left because I wanted to run for governor. I needed lead time." Lost to attorney Geoffrey Feiger in 1998 Democratic primary. What's next: "I'm 56 and really not interested in going back into government" so is looking for "the next worth- while thing to do." Taught public policy at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at U-M. Started University Preparatory Academy, Detroit. Family: Married to Karol, psychologist and attorney, employed at Macomb County Circuit Court. Three married children: Mitchell, professor of cultural geography at Hull University, Great Britain; Doug, IT entrepreneur, Atlanta; and Julie, counselor at Jewish Day School, Washington, D.C. Two grandchildren, Tobias and Leo. Influences: Mumford journalism teacher Charles Kaufman, "who really taught me how to write ... I started U-M in the fall of '60, the year that John Kennedy spoke on the steps of the Michigan Union. Kennedy and the early civil rights movement seemed to indicate that a small group of people could have a big impact ... I was also greatly influenced by Neil Staebler, the man who built the state Democratic Party after World War II with (former governor) Mennon Williams. Staebler taught me that you could be both ethical and effective in politics; that it wasn't a choice." Outside interests: "Between the ages of 16 and 26, I played bass and sang in a band called the Classics. We played school dances, bar mitzvahs, weddings, country clubs, sum- mer resorts in South Haven, fraternity parties." Now, Ross concentrates on "things I can do with Karol, with movies and travel at the top of the list." - Judy Doner Berne The Mumford Mix Ross, who graduated Detroit's Mumford High School in 1960, says, "Mumford served as a model for what is possible in Detroit." "What made Mumford was the culture," Ross says. "That culture was brought from home!' Studies show that a mother's education and economic level are powerful indica- tors of what a child achieves. The idea, he says, "is to create a school culture so strong that it negates that mother's educa- tion and income!' So far, despite UPiks success, "We still don't know how to prepare our kids aca- demically as well as the kids coming out of Birmingham or Troy." Ross uses his political ties, forged as an assistant secretary of labor in the Clinton administration and in various positions in Michigan government. He uses his Jewish ties, forged at Mumford, at Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township where he was president of Michigan State Temple Youth and at Birmingham Temple in Farmington Hills, where he and wife Karol now belong. So far, his ties have resulted in private donations, recruitment of committed peo- ple for his staff and boards of education, and access for students to internships, cultural and other educational oppor- tunities. It's no fluke, Ross says, that the school's three campuses are located near the city's cultural center. The School Setting Inside his office in the academy's elemen- tary school, he is surrounded by family photographs including one of him and Karol with President Bill and Hillary Clinton. Outside the office, he is surrounded by children dressed in red, white and black. "Hi, Mr. Ross:' says one small girl who greets him with a hug. The boy sitting next to her extends his hand. Instilling Hope on page A18 A16 April 3 • 2008