The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 20, 1988- Page 9 Roach 13-year regent debates issues with protesters Continued from Page 1 to keep him in a constant state of exhaustion. But as Roach recalls his days as a West Quad resident, he traces the development of his dedica- tion to the University. He wears a maize and blue tie. "When I was a student, I had no perception of what a great University this was," said Roach, shutting his eyes slightly. "I don't think I per- ceived that until I graduated." ROACH, WHO lives on a farm in nearby Saline with his wife, Sally, and commutes to his office in Detroit's Renaissance Center, has practiced law since 1961. Along with the legal books and papers, he adorns his 34th floor office with pictures of Athletic Director Don Canham, football coach Bo Schem- bechler, and former basketball coach Johnny Orr. Other regents praise Roach's dedication to the University. "You will never find anyone as loyal to the University as Regent Roach," Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) said. "He's tremendously valuable at regents' meetings. He reads and un- derstands the agenda, and makes sure Continued from Page 2 at once," she said. MICHIGAN Student Assembly President Mike Phillips, an LSA junior, said the assembly favors the idea of a mandatory class which ad- dresses sexism and homophobia as well as racism. He blamed the Uni- versity administration for "dragging its feet" on combatting racism on campus and said he would like to see administrators and faculty members take the class as well. Professors interested in the pro- ject are now developing several "model course outlines" of discus- sion topics, syllabi, and bibliogra- phies, Kimmeldorf said. Once the outlines are completed, the organiz- ers will work on a final course out- line. "We think this is a responsibility for the faculty to provide through the curriculum," Railton said. He and the others say they want the course "approved as soon as possible. JACK MEILAND, LSA associate dean for curriculum, said if the course is approved by the LSA Curriculum Committee, the first p art of a two-step approval process, it would go to the college's Execu- tive Committee, the second step, for final approval. The process could take as little as two to three weeks, Meiland said, but he added that the Curriculum Committee usually asks for clarifications before giving approval. LSA Dean Peter Steiner, a member of the Executive Committee, was unavailable for comment. F "To discuss a social phenomenon, namely racism, and to understand its social origin, is to realize that cur- rent manifestations and current modes of thinking are plagued with :mythologies," Railton said. The course will take a multidisciplinary approach to study- ing racism, looking at various as- pects through history, sociology, biology, economics, literature, and f philosophy, among others. Railton said emphasis in lectures would vary } depending on the field of the person teaching the class. English Prof. Buzz Alexander, another of the class planners, said a. w study by the group concluded that about 3,900 people will be taking the class each year. The class will be offered every term and will consist of * two lectures and two discussions each week. SEVERAL professors in differ- ent departments are developing the 'i's' are dotted and the 't's' are crossed." Power praised Roach's sense of humor, recalling last fall's reception honoring outgoing University President Harold Shapiro, when Roach directed the regents in a per- formance of "It's a small, small 'U"' - a salute to budget cutbacks Shapiro made during his tenure. "Regent Roach wrote the lyrics, got the music, investigated whether we had to pay for the copyrights, and taught us how to sing it," Power said. ROACH'S WEST Quad roommate, Terence Benbow - now dean of the University of Bridge- port's law school in Connecticut - said Roach "has the ability to turn from a serious discussion to a light- hearted story in the twinkle of an eye.". During a philosophical debate as an undergraduate, Benbow said, Roach and his roommates once "went from a very serious discussion of why you must take issues like these seriously to the imitation of an ape." He characterized Roach's play on their hall's football team as "gorilla- like," adding that he was "much to be feared on the football field, but it was more determination than skill." "We were a lively bunch," Ben- bow said, adding that he and Roach have kept contact with each other since their graduation from the Uni- versity. "A lot of kidding took place." DURING COLLEGE, Roach said, "I was aware that there was a Board (of Regents)," because of a University rule that banned students from driving on campus. As a law student, he researched the rule, and found that the regents had the power to enforce it. "I thought it might be occasion- ally nice to go on a date (in a car)," Roach said, adding that the rule was "my only connection of the concept of the regents. That was the only place I really disagreed with them." Roach, possibly the most vocal regent, with a flair for interpreting complex legal issues, said he made the decision to run for regent around to the eight-member board's final decisions on University policy and actions. During the past 13 years, Roach has sat on the board amid protests of the University's invest- ment in companies operating in South Africa, the proposed code of non-academic conduct, racism, and military research on campus. Regent Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) said Roach has a unique rapport with protesters, such as the ones who Regent Thomas Roach and his West Quad roommates once 'went from a very serious discussion of why you must take (evolution) issues like these seriously, to the imitation of an ape.' - University of Bridgeport, Conn., Law School Dean Terence Benbow, Roach's former roommate But Weine said Roach "works in this abstract notion that the Univer- sity should be run to the interests of the state. They should look to stu- dents for direction. I wouldn't con- sider him to be a student advocate in any sense." OTHER STUDENTS have expressed their discontent with his role in University policy-making. "Regent Roach has a disquieting smugness which broadcasts his au- thority," said law student Eric Schnaufer, a vocal anti-code activist. "Roach is more tightly connected with the administration than perhaps any other regent." Wendy Sharp, an LSA senior and member of the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee, ex- pressed discontent that Roach voted with the board against amending the regents' anti-discrimination bylaw to include sexual orientation last Jan- uary. She said, though, that Roach "seems to listen more than the other regents did" After the regents' decision, La- GROC members protested vehe- mently against the regents and the administration. Despite his accessibility, Roach has aroused students' ire over a number of issues. For example, when the' regents voted to divest 90 percent of University funds from South Africa in 1983, Roach dis- sented, saying U.S. operations can be used to help the South African people. He has been a strong proponent of "academic freedom," which many define as the University researcher's right to research any topic, even if it can be used to harm other humans. Last year, the board contradicted vo- cal student opposition in voting to relax the guidelines barring research which could be used to kill or maim human beings. RECENTLY, the board's sup- port of Interim University President Robben Fleming's anti-discrimina- tion proposal has prompted the loudest student protest. Many stu- dent groups, such as MSA, maintain the policy is nothing more than a code of non-academic conduct to control student behavior. Roach, among others, maintains that academic punishments can be used to prevent behavior which is "outrageous." When he attended the University, he said, "The policy then was much more intrusive on student freedom," citing the driving ban as an example. 1972. Regents, as public officials elected by the state, often participate in the Democratic National Party in order to receive votes for the nomi- nation. In 1972, Roach became a national platform member, and eventually he moved up to executive vice-chair of the party. The convention floor, he said, was "exciting and grueling" and he worked 20 hours a day on the floor and in committee meetings. But being a regent, he said, is a "stepping stone to political obliv- ion. A lot of political figures use the office as a bullypulpit... a launching pad to a higher office. But the role of a regent is to work for the Univer- sity, to try to make it even better. And that isn't the kind of thing that receives a lot of press." LOCALLY, however, students, faculty, and staff pay close attention forced the regents to relocate their meeting last week. "He's the type who will engage them directly, and challenge them. He seems to get a kick out of it... Students seem to appreciate that, and he's not frayed by that. He can jockey with the stu- dents." Roach said debates such as the divestment issue are "exhilarating, like a runner's high." Student leaders, though, say they should have a larger role in the re- gents' decision-making process, in- stead of merely debating the issues among themselves. Former MS A President Ken Weine said Roach "is by far the most hard-working regent, and the most familiar with the day- to-day activities on campus." Weine said Roach is a "big gun" on the board, and that other Democrats of- ten vote in his direction. model course plans around five core areas: concepts of racism, the history of racism, institutional discrimina- tion, social change, and parallel forms of discrimination, Kimmeldorf said. These core areas will then be put into a general framework of varying concepts of race, the historical expe- rience of minorities, current aspects of discrimination, including sexism and institutional racism, and social change. Organizers will recommend that students take the class during their sophomore year, Alexander said. This will give students a year to ad- just to life at the University, but the class will be taught early enough so that its principles will be applicable to future courses. Getting all sophomores through the class will require four lectures for 500 people each term, Alexander said. A limit of 20 students per dis- cussion section will make 200 sec- tions necessary. THE GROUP made a rough estimate that the course will cost $563,000. Alexander said about $100,000 will be needed to pay the professors' salaries. The group would prefer graduate teaching assistants to lead the dis- cussions. Each section would be considered a one-quarter appointment on the salary scale, so the course would have to budget the full salary of 50 TAs, based on 200 sections. At $9,260 a year for a full TA salary, about $463,000 would have to be allotted for TA salaries. Alexander said using undergradu- ate facilitators and graders in the dis- cussions would cost less than half the amount needed for TAs, but most group members prefer having graduate students over undergradu- ates. "We're going to propose teach- ing assistants," Alexander said. Alexander said he wants students to be graded in the class because "we don't want people blowing it off." But, he said, this issue has not yet been decided on by the group. ANOTHER PROJECT which will "very likely" be finalized soon, Vest said, is discussion of "diversity and racism" in Engineering 103, a class that all first-year engineering students are required to take. Implementing the LSA class could positively affect the Univer- sity's minority faculty recruitment goals. Kimmeldorf said course de- signers want "minority and women faculty members to do most of the teaching, or at least a large share of it," but the planners realize there are few minority faculty available to teach the class. 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