The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 7, 1978-Page 6 Adm'nistrators:Min Regents hold the final authority ding the 'U's busines By BRIAN BLANCHARD Like any board of directors overseeing a large interest, the University's Regents regularly approve building and razing, vote in new programs, dissolve old ones and question-before approving-an enormous * annual budget. But unlike the boards of GM or, Ford, the eight public officials sit atop an organization which deals in ideas and intellectual growth, where there is no clear profit to maximize, save prestige. They come from Flint, Muskegon, Detroit and across the city every month to meet and discuss University policy. The University foots the bill for their two-day stay, putting them up in the hide-away Ingalls House where Robert Frost, Gerald Ford and other visitors of note have hung their coats. ASIDE FROM the power reserved for the people in Lansing and Washington who help out With the nearly $200 millidi annual University budget, authority on campus begins and ends with the Regents. When a Regent is elected to the eight-year post in a state- wide election, he or she has been granted the power to hire, or fire personnel and. to diminish, or revive, any program that suits their collective taste. Though their capacity for action is great, the business of. running the University is usually finished before the Regents respond "yes" or "no" to a. given issue. The administration recommends personnel appointments, programs and policies and unless the Regents find a serious flaw in a plan it will most likely pass, as the ad- ministration suggests. When they gather in the Ad- ministration Building for Thursday af- ternoon and Friday morning sessions, the Regents are laden with bound agen- das and loose papers which stand an in- ch or two off their long, shiny table. University President Robben Fleming carefully directs the discussion in the Regents Room with a close eye on his watch. FLEMING, OR one of the six Univer- sity vice presidents, will typically offer a brief introduction of the issue at hand and present the major arguments for and against its approval. In the large majority of cases, the Regents' questions, if they ask any at all, are routine or rhetorical. The presence of a proposal on the thick agenda virtually assures its passage. The University is currently in a time of serious financial difficulty and the Regents consider themselves its finan- cial guardians. In the past year they hiked dorm, tuition and University Hospital rates and berated the state for lack of support. "It's not a demonstratable fact that becoming a Regent is a good way to fur- ther a career, but it is a title with prestige-one which probably doesn't hurt a lawyer or management con- sultant whose wealth depends on con- nections and acquaintances. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) is curren- tly making his second bid for a seat in the U.S. Senate, while Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) is married to Phillip Power who would like the same job. ALL ARE WITHIN ten years of their average age, 44. The growing list of acronyms on their resumes represent crowded public lives: law associations, See REGENTS, Page 8 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG University Regent Thomas Roach ponders a new proposal during a Regents meeting. UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS: All the President's men By KEN PARSIGIAN Whenever tuition is hiked or buildings demolished or a bold new research project is undertaken at the University, President Robben Fleming and the Regents get most of the headlines and the credit. But before any issue reaches the big brass, it must pass through an incredible maze of committees; assistants, advisory boards and finally sestrings. Also a newcomer-he assumed the post in , January 1977-Brinkerhoff has had a tumultuous year as a result of protests against University investments in South Africa. Brinkerhoff is responsible for all in- vestments and is also ln charge of University legal affairs and business transactions. -AS THE TITLE implies, Vice The University is a state-supported institution, which means it receives much of its funding-over $100 million per year-from the state government. Vice +President for State Relations Richard Kennedy is entrusted with the job of preserving the University's relationship with the legislature. He pleads the University's case before the heads of state government in hopes of procuring the funds necessary to operate the University and maintain its lofty stature. A university is often judged by the quality of its research, and the Univer sity has an outstanding reputation i this area. The task of surveying th University's research activity belongs to Vice President for Research Charles Overberger, who is a macromolecula chemist by trade. And finally, there is Vice Presiden for University Relations and Develop ment Michael Radock. Radock, a former journalism professor, is ii charge of a system of services designe to inform the public about the Univer sity and protect its good name. A student coming to the University has a lot of needs other than academic, food and shelter: We try to assess these needs be they emotional, social, spiritual or developmental and try to meet these INSTRUMENTS * NEW & USED * EXPERT REPAIR * RESTORATIONS REPAIR 11 needs. -Henry Johnson, Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG University President Robben Fleming contemplates a policy proposal during a Regents meeting. Life at the top Fleming guides 'U' Vice President for Student Services By BRIAN BLANCHARD He stretches out every third or fourth word, pausing with the confidence of one unaccustomed to interruptions. "Faculty, like students, in a big university don't see a lot of the president and therefore, don't know the president very well." Then his voice drops a bit, "Oh, they may know something about you ... University President Robben Fleming, now in his tenth year as head of the administration, seems to work hard at slowing his speech to get the point across. While opening the ceremonious 1978 graduation exercises in front of thousands of parents and graduates in Crisler Arena, Fleming, clad in academic for- mal robes, spoke to the group as though they were sitting in his own living room. He told them it was a pleasant day out, spent several more minutes explaining that the day was a break in the weather, and then finished his brief -talk before turning the, podium over to the next speaker. BUT THE CONGENIAL Flem- ing has riot come to his current position simply on the strength of his observations about the weather. In 1968, both Minnesota and Michigan wanted Fleming to leave Madison, where he was Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin, to run their univer- sities. Michigan won. And now his job is to administer time, money, projects and other people's jobs. Though he is often criticized for his policy decisions, few question Fleming's ability to administer. Sitting in his office on the second floor of the Ad- ministration Building, the 61- year-old Fleming responds easily to questions about the University and his influence on it. "In the routine of operating, I won't be much involved," says the white-haired Fleming. "However, when the questions begin to get troublesome-for in- stance, when you get into the whole question, of how are we going to put the budget together or what should our policy be on South Africa-I would play a very key part in the final decision. FLEMING WAS once a labor arbitrator and still holds the title of law professor; he has the calm manner of the former and the anecdotal speech habits of the latter. Local spectators, report- ers and photographers never seem to bother Fleming. He rarely raises his voice. See LIFE, Page 8 one of the University's six vice presidents. The vice presidents-each with con- trol over his own particular sector of the massive University bureaucracy-dissect each issue, with the help of a network of administrative assistants, long before the Regents ever give their seal of approval. The vice presidents then report their findings to the Executive Committee-which con- sists of Fleming and the six vice presidents. Recommendations that come out of this committee, with Fleming's approval, form the basis for most Regental decisions. THE MAN PERHAPS most respon- sible for the quality of a University degree, is Vice President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro. He has only held the post for a year, but has been at the University since 1963, and was chairman of the economics department from 1974-77. Shapiro is in charge of all academic programs at the University and the deans of all the schools and colleges report to him. In addition, he is chair- man of the Budget Allocation Commit- tee which determines the amount of funding each University academic and non-academic unit will receive. Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff holds the most power over the University's pur- President for Student Services Henry Johnson has the strongest impact on student life. Trained as a psychiatric social worker, Johnson says his job is to, "administer the units of the Univer- sity that are most related to the studen- ts' developmental needs. 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