w w W U w lw 1w _w- -IF 'W w qF The Quest for Shapiro s Successor By Martha Sevetson Shapiro (1980-1987) ... restoredfinancial stability to the University after cutbacks in state allocations T HE SEARCH IS ON. The University is about to lose President Harold Shapiro to his new post at Princeton University, but the quest for his successor is far from over. Although the University's Board of Regents initiated the search last May, the selection committee is only now ready to establish a list of selection criteria. Shapiro will become the next president of Princeton - his alma mater - this January, ending his eight-year term as the University's top administrator. University officials have praised his performance, increasing the already high demands on his prospective successors. "He's done an outstanding job," said Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline). "We thought he was fantastic when we picked him, and he's exceeded our expectations." Shapiro, formerly the vice president for academic affairs, was selected as president after a ten-month search process in 1978. Reduced state budget allocations had forced the University into financial hardship, and Shapiro - former chair of the University's Economics department - was known for his economic expertise. "The regents have had an uncanny ability to select the appropriate person for the job in each era," said Vice President for Government Relations Richard Kennedy. "(Shapiro's) greatest contribution was seeing the University through a period of extraordinary financial difficulty." Shapiro's excellent reputation for financial leadership made him the clear choice of the Princeton selection committee, which chose him in less than three months during their search last spring. Current Princeton President William Bowen is also a highly regarded economist. According to Craig Bloom, editor of the Daily Princetonian, Shapiro was a conservative choice - not expected to bring any radical changes to campus. "Shapiro came quickly as a consensus," Bloom said. "The attitude was: 'This is your best candidate, but you'll never get him."' B3ut Princeton did. And as Shapiro returns to his alma mater, the University is left with a vacancy at its helm. "In a sense, it's a bad thing that an esteemed colleague is leaving," said Political Scignce Prof. Raymond Tanter. "But it's a good thing in that it allows for a reassessment of the University's values." This appraisal became the first formal step of the Fleming (1968-1978) ... at the University's helm during a period of social unrest and student protest University's selection process. Last May, the board appointed themselves as the Presidential Selection Committee. Following the procedure used in 1978, the regents created three advisory committees composed of students, faculty members, and alumni. Over the summer, the advisory committees met independently to draw up three lists of needs at the University. The students' statement, completed in June, summarized student demands in recent years. The committee called for more racial diversity on campus, more emphasis on teaching, and greater student rights. The faculty and alumni statements, also completed over the summer, were not released to the public. In addition, the regents have solicited input from the University's executive officers, the chancellors of the regional campuses at Flint and Dearborn, and various state legislators. According to Roach, the statements and suggestions have been evaluated by the regents, and preliminary drafts of a list of criteria have been circulated. "The advisory committees' next step will be to assist us in evaluating and narrowing the list of candidates," he said. A list of candidates has already accumulated from nominations and applications received by the Presidential Search Office in the Business School. Although most candidates will be nominees rather than applicants, according to Roach, the University has advertised the position in periodicals such as the Wall Street Journal and the Chronicle on Higher Education. According to Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey), many of these candidates and applicants will never be interviewed by the search committee. "You can eliminate 90 percent or 75 percent of candidates just from the material you gather on paper," he said. Roach said the search - though still in its early stages - is following the timetable anticipated last May. But most University officials agree that the new president is unlikely to take office immediately when Shapiro leaves. Roach - a co-chair of the search committee - predicted the entire process would take eight months. On this schedule, the new president would be selected early in January. "If we choose someone from inside, it's possible the person would take office immediately," he said. Two of the last four University presidents rose from faculty and administrative ranks; the other two were administrators at other universities. The "number two" University administrator - Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost James Duderstadt - has denied any interest in the presidential spot. If the new president is a top administrator at another college or university, the office may remain vacant until the new president can leave his or her former position. Shapiro requested an eight-month stay at the University after accepting his position at Princeton. Top administrators at other universities whose names have been mentioned in speculation over the University's search have refused to comment on the position. The regents are expected to appoint an interim president - possibly former President Robben Fleming - to fill the gap. During the 1978 presidential search, former Vice President for Academic Affairs Allen Smith was appointed interim president. Duderstadt also served as interim president when Shapiro was on sabbatical last year. Athough most state universities entrust the final presidential selection to the board of regents or trustees, the selection process used to narrow the candidates to a small pool varies greatly among Big 10 schools. At Indiana University, which selected a new president last spring, the Board of Trustees established a search committee composed of students, faculty members, staff members, a business executive, and a trustee. The committee narrowed the pool of candidates to three, and the Board of Trustees approved the final selection. During the University of Wisconsin's recent search for a new chancellor, the Board of Regents established a 13-person committee to narrow the field of candidates. This procedure also involved student and faculty representation in the actual selection committee. The University of Iowa's Board of Regents have employed Heidrick and Sturggles Executive Search Firm in Chicago to develop and narrow a list of potential candidates in its current presidential search. "The process tends to be generally the same, but all universities have their own special needs," said William J. Bowen, vice president of Heidrick and Struggles. "The inner workings of how you get to your short list tend to be different depending on your needs at the time." Bowen has consulted over 60 universities involved in searches for top administrators. "There's always a search committee, always a mission statement, and always a description of qualifications," he said. "And all searches are confidential in the sense that only the committee deals with the names that are under consideration." According to Bowen, the top candidates would not involve themselves in a public search process. "Many of the best names don't apply - they have to be courted," he said. "The very best people are not going to run in a beauty contest." The University's Board of Regents has emphasized this need for confidentdlity since the search was initiated. At the May board meeting, Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said "a breach of confidence shall be cause for dismissal from the advisory committees." Dave Newblatt, chair of the student committee, said the confidentiality requirement poses a dilemma to him. "The pact of secrecy makes sure names under consideration don't get out early, and you have to make sure that doesn't happen," he said. "But you have to make sure the process is more open than it is. Taxpayers are paying, and students are paying. It's everyone's university, but practically no one gets involved in selecting the president." State Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) said that while confidentiality is needed at this stage, the final pool of candidates should be open to public scrutiny. "There's a great risk still to the three to five candidates, but I think that has to be balanced with the need for openness of a public university," Pollack said. "It's a conflict of needs, but in the end the Open Meetings Act is there for a reason and has to be strictly observed by the regents." The Open Meetings Act is a state law that compels elected officials to allow public attendance at meetings when a set quorum of officials is present Roach said that the regents are exempt from the Open Meetings Act even at the final stage if the candidates under consideration request confidentiality. All of the candidates in the 1978 search requested confidentiality. Kennedy, who works very closely with state legislators, said that an open search process must be sacrificed to attract the best candidates. "While the public has a right to know, the public also has a right to have its institutions run by the best possible people it can find," Kennedy said. "I think the public's interest is served by the fact that their representatives are picking the person. That's the principal job (the regents) do." Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson also supports the regents' search. "The end products have always been good from the process," he said. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." The chancellors of both the Flint and Dearborn regional campuses said the regents are very receptive to their interests in the search process. Both have been invited to participate in the interviewing of candidates. B3ut faculty and student leaders have voiced concerns that their representation in an advisory capacity may not be sufficient to ensure that their interests are considered. "The structure is flexible in the sense that the regents can involve the advisory committees to the extent that they want," said Harris McClamroch, chair of the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs. "The regents can make effective use of these committees, if they choose. They could ignore them, if they choose." Newblatt, also a Michigan Student Assembly representative, agreed, "Students are never going to know what the consideration was in the final decision. (The regents) could listen to us and carefully consider our proposals and recommendations, or they may not." In 1978, MSA boycotted the original process for several weeks until the regents were willing to grant the students an advisory role. Members of the University's staff - non- faculty employees - have requested formal input in the current process. Roach said the regents were unable to formulate a mechanism to incorporate staff input. Unlike the faculty, students, and alumni, staff members have no central governing body to appoint committee members. The advisory committee system and the solicitation of individual comments have opened the discussion - if not the actual decision - to participation from most sectors of the University community. "My job is fundraising and communication, so I want (the president) to be someone who is a good fundraiser and communicator," said Vice President for Development and Communication Jon Cosovich. "Henry Johnson wants someone who understands what students' problems are, and (Vice President for Resea who is interested in researc "We're looking for s capacity," Cosovich said. that's kind of hard to fi strengths and weaknesses." According to Kennedy ten presidents has had cert for the position at that pa had the economic dexterit: period of financial hardship Fleming, Kennedy saic especially equipped to deal student protests during the Movement. According to Kennedy, f "a deeply scholarly and p the state and the Universit' the entire higher education "In the next little whil enormous technological cha will be someone who under University in its leadership using tools for itself and to Kennedy and Cosovich a vital to sustaining both sta but neither anticipated any donation campaign or relati "I don't anticipate t significantly under a new p a momentum that has been will go on regardless of the Chief Financial Officer in the drive for alumni slowdown in gifts when S the new president will be donors... there will be an doesn't mean there will be : Brinkerhoff - who h presidents than any othe "changing of the guard" is a "One thing other peopl building tend to forget is very effectively for some blow up," he said. "The ess in the classrooms and the fa Robin Jacoby, an aide t does not play a critical role University. "Fundamenta administration is to facilit said. Jacoby said Shapiro executive officers on in administrators will researc and develop recommendatic "(The president) has tc whether he agrees with th something else," Jacoby s decides on his own. What c are discussions." "(Shapiro) has the abil ideas, opinions, and viewj acknowledge, but which I Susan Lipschutz, a former beyond themselves." In his remaining four r says he will remain acti' community. But top admini begin any new programs or "We all understand t months," Cosovich said. decisions he understands a successors." Cosovich cite( code of non-academic cond remain on hold. "His time here is going things he has set in me projects," Jacoby agreed. "1 to happen at the University just that he won't be exer projects as he has." Hatcher (1951-1968) ... led the University through a period r of rapid expansion Sevetson is a Daily staffer PAGE 6 WEEKENDISEPTEMtER;18, 1187 WEEKEND/SEPTEMBER 18, 1987