4 Page 16 -The Michigan Daily, Thursday, September 10, 1987 Results of six point plan to presented in fall report (Continued from Page 1) Education Professor Charles Moody implement a complete overhaul of was named to the position in May the current programs concerning and began active duty on June 1. minority recruitment and retention. Moody said he does not plan to Instead, Moody hopes to improve on existing strengths as well as develop some new policies. "I hope to create new variations or new approaches to the same theme. I want to try to develop some novel, unique, innovative ways of recruiting and tapping into minority organizations. I will try to maximize the resources we have at our disposal," he said. WITH the aid of Vice Provost for Academic Affairs James Duderstadt, Moody is currently working on the establishment of an advisory committee to his office. The committee, which will consist of representatives from various minority groups and will provide input to the office. Moody stresses that attempts to alleviate racism on campus is not a one- man show. It is a problem that requires the cooperation of the entire University community. "More than one person created the problem. It's going to take more than one person to solve it." The rest of the initiatives are still in the early stages of being implemented and it is too early to evaluate their progress, said Jacoby. For example, the $35,000 dollars which is to be appropriated to a black student union is currently being allocated, but that is the extent of the development so far, said Roselle Wilson, assistant to the vice president of academic affairs. BLOOM COUNTY. I U No.. oI ," 4 . Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY The University's newest Regent Phil Power (D-Ann Arbor) says he has a lot to learn about his new position. Newesthregent prepares 44 Watch for it in e irbigan 13 at-IV for job on t By ALAN PAUL Philip Power, the newest member of the University's Board of Regents, is hardly a stranger to the University. He was appointed to the board in June to replace his wife, Sarah Goddard Power, who committed suicide in March. Power's father, Eugene, served as a regent from 1956 to 1966. Power, who was an executive editor of The Michigan Daily in 1960, likes to refer to himself as a "newsman." He currently owns Suburban Commun- ications Inc., a suburban newspaper chain. Sitting in his comfortable and casual Ann Arbor office, Power seemed at ease and genuinely excited about many of his ideas and the prospect of being intimately involved with the University and carrying on what is fast becoming a family tradition. STILL, he does not yet feel ready to assert himself on the board, nor to discuss in detail the racial tensions on campus last semester and other events immediately preceding his wife's suicide. "My priority is to learn about the institution and to learn about the priorities of the executive officers and the board of regents," Power said. "I'm the junior regent and it's presumptuous of me to force my agenda on a very large institution and a very capable group of people." There seems to be little public doubt among the regents that Power is a capable person, ready to begin active contribution to the board. "I've known Phil for many years," Thomas Roach (D-Saline) said. "He's dedicated to the University as we all knew he was. He's already shown that dedication and energy. I'm very satisfied with the selection." DESPITE the fact that both his father and wife served on the board, Power had never attended a regents meeting before June, his first as a member of the board. His first impression is one of near awe. "My first impression of the board is to be struck by. the amount of time, energy, and commitment members have to the University," Power said, leaning forward and raising his voice. "They don't get paid. They don't get any perks to speak of, they get a lot of criticism, and in return for this not great compensation, they have to read huge amounts of paperwork, participate in interviews, and try to set policy. "They really work hard. I think we really love the place. It's inconceivable that someone would put that much commitment into something they didn't really care about," he said. Entering what he thinks will be a "very complicated and interesting year" for the University, Power believes the most pressing issue facing the institution is the selection of a new president. There has been a very ie 'U' board high faculty and executive turnover rate, and Power said leadership is needed now more than ever. He believes that University President Harold Shapiro, despite charges of aloofness from students, will be very difficult to replace. "I DON'T think President Shapiro is low profile. I think he's been accessible and I think he's been available," Power said. "He is a very, very able, low key man who has been one of the finest University presidents in the country. No person is irreplaceable but Harold is about as close to that as you can get." Power thinks the University has made great strides in the past 15 years, becoming a more renowned and respected research institution, advancements which he says must be dutifully maintained. Yet he is not as confident that undergraduate education has improved in the same fashion. "I don't know about that," Power said after a long pause. "That's certainly a subject that is concerning the executive officers and I think:you'll notice that in the budget. It's a much harder thing to gauge (than research)." Yet Power does believe that it is both proper and realistic for undergraduates, though transitory in the University community, to exert influence over University policy. "I think that the University is a community and .. . students are the core of this endeavor and they do and ought to have a great influence on the course and values of the institution. "NOW, any one student is here for a relatively short period, and if you compare the ability of one student to have an affect on the institution with a faculty member who's here for 30 years, that's a very different time of involvement. But if you look at the student body as a whole, it is here continuously." Remaining quite reserved about University issues, Power stuck close to the basics, rarely venturing beyond fairly pat answers. He declined to elaborate on what qualities were important for a quality president and said he has not yet developed a stance on the proposed code of non academic conduct. However,. when discussing national and state politics and issues, Power opened up and the breadth of his intelligence and creative thinking became apparent. Power has been involved in state politics for most of his adult life. In 1978, he ran for the Democratic nomination to the United States Senate, losing to Carl Levin. He has also been concerned with human resources, serving on several governor's committees, including the Michigan Job Training Coordinating Council, which he now chairs. See POWER, Page 17 1,- t JA 4 i s