The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1988 - Page 13 NEWS Duers I Continued from Page 1 withdrew June 4, citing family and professional com- mitments in Buffalo. But sources within the search said Sample was taken seriously by few. One called him a bozo." U.S. Government Office of Management and Budget Director James Miller was another unrealistic finalist. Sources said the regents added his name haphazardly - with no intention to pick him for the post. "It seems from the regents' reactions that they con- ceded that Miller was not a real candidate," the source said. The regents have refused to discuss candidates, but sources from two search committees said the board cut Miller when the initial list - which included former U.S. President Jimmy Carter - was trimmed to 100. Members from both the student and the faculty and staff committees said they were shocked when the re- gents inserted Miller on the list of finalists, calling him "grossly unqualified" and a "jackass." Added a faculty member: "He would not have been a name to jump to my mind when I read the regents list of criteria for the president - he's not an obvious choice." Miller, who has never held an administrative posi- tion at a universi- ty, would not comment. The only re- main ing candidate, then, was Duder- stadt. And some sources speculated that the regents - with two candidates out of reach and two they never in- tended to hire - purposely left the provost as the only palpable choice. "It looks like (the regents) loaded the deck in favor of Duderstadt," a source said, adding that Duderstadt and the regents form the boys network." provost. But after the re- gents named Dud- erstadt to the post June 10, Regent Paul Brown (D- Petoskey), chair of the regents' presi- dential search, said "there were more ., than two candidates who had been in- terviewed who were left in the running w hen w e decided to n m at Ji . nominate Jim." But the search chronology refutes Brown's claim. During a lawsuitS hearing against the regents to open the search on May 27, the regents' attorney said one candidate had just withdrawn from the race. Coupled with Sample's withdrawal June 4 and Gregorian's on June 6, only one other candidate - Massey or Miller - remained when Duderstadt was nominated. The Ann Arbor News - later joined by the Detroit Free Press -sued the regents on May 20, claiming the board's confidential search violated Michigan's Open Meetings Act and Freedom of Information Act. The OMA states that public bodies such as the re- gents must announce all meetings when a quorum five out of the eight regents - is present. The FOIA requires public bodies to release public documents, with some exceptions, upon request. The News charged that the regents met privately with a quorum and had illegally withheld travel records. But Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Robert, Campbell ruled in favor of the regents. The suit is now pending in the Michigan Court of Appeals. The OMA also states that public bodies must makec all decisions, including job offers, in public. If the re,- gents privately offered Gregorian the post, they wouls., have violated the OMA and conducted an illegal searc-,, The regents had sole authority to appoint the presi- dent and contact or disqualify candidates at any point during the 13-month confidential search. However, three advisory committees - bodies of ten students, 15 faculty and staff, and ten alumni - evaluated every candidate. Two members of each committee joined the: regents to interview each of the five finalists. Among the finalists, Gregorian was the top choice of the student committee, which consistently dis- endorsed Duderstadt. Their second choice was Massey. Gregorian nucleus of the University's "old Another source said the regents had been grooming Duderstadt for the position when he became provost. The previous president, Harold Shapiro, also was Agenda Continued from Page 1 up with solid long-term development of minority programs at all levels o education. "He's an intelligent and capable person," she said. "The question is wvhether he will use it to produce "anything of lasting value. Diversity is a slogan to hide behind. But be- lind propaganda work, there ought to be something substantial." 4 Comninou, however, said she is skeptical Duderstadt's diversity pro- gram will stay on track because, as dean of the engineering college, his priorities quickly adjusted from aca- demic integrity to economic pros- perity. "I've never doubted his sin- cerity," she said. "But he started putting economic success ahead of @verything else. We can be a suc- xessful corporation like any business in the United States. He's a good manager. But this is the University Vf Michigan." MANY OF THE deans of smal- tor schools said they are pleased With Duderstadt's appointment be- qause he has already promised them strong financial support for new programs. Boylan said Duderstadt has pro- mised funding for an evolving arama program for undergraduates. Architecture and Urban Planning fean Robert Beckley said Duder- Stadt endorsed programs to send fa- aulty abroad for experience and to publicize the school's programs to attract better students. However, the unnamed engineer- ing professor said some of Duder- itadt's financial endeavors were iorally irresponsible and lacked discretion. "The amount of military *search should be limited," he said. 'It's his policy to accept all such re- search, even though he hasn't stated 'S"IT WILL BE one of the great- st challenges of his tenure to Maintain the integrity of the Univer- ;ity as an academic institution at the same time he tries to maintain its vitality. " "In this respect, he would likely llave to pay specific attention to the pressing social issues of our time and also to the need for broad efforts to generating world peace." The regents appointed Duderstadt tb the post after a 13-month confi- dential search for the successor to President Harold Shapiro, who left ik December 1987 to head Princeton lniversity, his alma mater. Is Your Car Sick? ind the ri ht doctor to fix it right here in the CAR PAGE Every Thursday in The Michigan Daily LII __ 1 I i TEAR OUT THESE COUPONS. TEAR DOWN TO RECORD TOWN. THE ONLY MUSIC AND VIDEO STORE YOU'LL EVER NEED! SU P E R C 0 U P 0 N #1S SP-A* I I I I I CASSE $5 Present this coup cassette (regularly pi This coupon not va expir NY 'E ORLP on and receive any LP or riced up to $9.99) for $5.99. lid with other offers. Offer es 9/30/88. MICHD#1 - - P L r U E R C O U P O N # 2 ANY () - COMPACT DISC esent this coupon and receive any single album ompact disc (regularly priced up to $16.99) for 11.99. 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