One Iiundrcdflve years of editorizlfreedom I tn Weather Tonight: Enough snow to build a Frosty, mid-30s. Tomorrow: Snow, a corn- cob pipe and button nose. Friday January 26, 1996 x t , y y ,. ,. r .,...A. , . 4'k±.. 3cn w .,r ,. Nonregent Presidential Search w ffl The regents yesterday approveda mprocedure for the selection of th University's next president. Following is a summary of the st'star' p ,earch forPresident j'DIClkS I a ie candidatesI. By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter The University Board of Regents approved a presidential search plan yes- t ay that will keep the names of all c didates secret until the final stage. The plan and timetable outline the use of an advisory committee, intended to secure candidate confidentiality dur- ing the early parts of the process. Provost J. Bernard Machen said the 12-member advisory committee, which will meet in closed sessions, complies with the Open Meetings Act. The state law requires that all board meetings of public bodies be open, including dis- sions about potential candidates. Machen said the committee is ex- empt from the act because "the sole purpose of the PSAC (search commit- tee) is advisory in nature." The advisory committee will be made up of seven faculty members, two staff members, one alum and two students* - an undergraduate and graduate. The committee will "star" its top five choices and forward the list to the regents. Machen, along with Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison and Secretary Roberta Palmer, designed the plan after listening to pub- lic comments during nine forums held across the state. Some media law experts have raised questions about whether the plan vio- lates the act. "I think it violates the law in spirit, if not in letter," said communication stud- lecturer Joan Lowenstein, who spe- The Presidential Search Committee (PSC) yesterday authorized a 12-member Presidential Search Advisory Committee (PSAC). Two members will be students; Provost Machen will recommend persons for the PSAC in February. At a public meeting, the PSC meets with the PSAC to discuss the position of president and the search process. Any further contact between the two groups must also be public, except for nominations submitted by the PSC to the PSAC; The PSAC is to recruit and provide initial reviews of candidates. They will recommend a list of candidates, but are not to eliminate any. The PSAC presents a public list of candidates, recommending at least five, in September. The PSC develops a list of finalists, who will be interviewed on pampus in open meetings. The regents will select a president at an open meeting or meetings by the end of October. cializes in media law. "I think that if recommendations are made that are for all purposes final decisions and if the recommendations are taken seriously, then it is not just an advisory board." Machen said that while the process is not totally open, it does not violate the law. "It is clear that what we're proposing does not fully agree with what some of the newspapers have suggested," See SEARCH, Page 2 Research VP will be first minonty to lead school By Jodi Cohen and Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporters Homer Neal, the University's vice president for research, yesterday was named the immediate successor to Presi- dent James J. Duderstadt. Neal will become the University's interim president July 1, the day after Duderstadt steps down. He will be the first minority to lead the University in its 179-year history. Regent Nellie Varner(D-Detroit)said yesterday's meeting of the presidential search committee provided the perfect opportunity to make the announcement. The presidential search plan adopted yesterday by the Board of Regents calls for the next president to be named this fall. Varner said this would require an interim president to maintain "the con- tinuity of leadership when President Duderstadt steps down June 30." Neal said he hopes his role will help to "prepare for the transfer." "He is stepping forward to serve the University," Varner said. "Not that this is something he desires - it is some- thing he feels he should do." Provost J. Bernard Machen said Neal was a good choice because he is already a member of the "executive team." "It will make the transition smoother," Machen said. Homer A. Neal Current Position: Vice president for research since 1993 Previous Positions: Chairman of the University's department of physics, 1987-93; leading professor of physics at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1986-87; Stony Brook provost, 1981-86; Indiana University dean of research and graduate development, 1976-81. Education: Ph.D. from the University in 1966. Honors: 1980-81 Guggenheim Fellowship, 1984 Indiana University honorary doctorate, 1986 Stony Brook Medal recipient. "He happens to be the best" - Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) Neal said he is "prepared to and will work to sustain the overall momentum of the campus." The regents and Neal agreed that he would not seek the University's perma- nent presidency. In the search's earlier stages, the regents said any interim presi- dent would serve in the position only if they agreed to not seek the position permanently. "He is very clear that he wants to go back to the faculty," Machen said. Before being named vice president for research in 1993, Neal spent six years as the chair of the physics depart- ment. He is on the executive committee of the Smithsonian Institute and re- ceived a Ph.D. in physics from the Uni- versity in 1966. Neal has served as the dean of re- search and graduate development at Indiana University and the provost for the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Maureen A. Hartford, vice president for student affairs, said the regents re- ceived advice from University admin- istrators before selecting Neal. "All of us gave input, but the regents made the final decision," Hartford said. "I'm delighted that Homer will take up the reins once Jim relinquishes them in July." Other administrators praised Neal's academic credentials and administra- tive abilities. "He is a world-recognized scholar," Machen said. "Homer Neal is known throughout the world as a respected physicist." LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg said Neal's scholarly reputation gives a posi- tive signal about the University's com- mitment to education. "I think it sends a very strong mes- sage about the importance of academ- ics at the University," Goldenberg said. "I think this is a wonderful choice." Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) said Neal's appointment is based on his experience and that his status as a minority was not a consideration. "We were looking for the best person to take the helm at the University," McGowan said. "He happens to be a lot of things. He happens to be the best." After 28 years, stolen Picasso freturns to 'U' By Josh White Daily Staff Reporter Twenty-eight years after leaving the University in a trav- eling exhibit, sketches by Pablo Picasso and Henry Moore are coming home. Federal Bureau of Investigation officials in California recovered the two drawings Wednesday at the residence of a Is Angeles woman. The artwork was stolen from a Univer- sity exhibit on loan to Delta College in Bay City, Mich., during the summer of 1967. The discovery, the result of a lead received by the FBI last year, ends a lengthy search that began in 1967, said John Hoos, director of the Los Angeles FBI media relations department. Charlie J. Parsons, special agent in charge ofthe FBI's Los Angeles office, said the two pieces of art are valued at approximately $100,000 each. Special Agent Greg Stejskal of the FBI's Ann Arbor field ice said the artworks were recovered after the Los Angeles man tried to sell the Henry Moore piece, titled "Study of a Seated Figure," to a major consignment agency in California. "Early in 1995, a consignment agency in California contacted the Henry Moore Foundation in En- gland to check on the autenticity of the drawing," Stejskal said. "The Foundation deter- mined that it was in fact authentic and that it was also sto- len. They eventu- ally contacted the University's De- (ji partment of Public Safety, who in turn contacted (the Ann Arbor FBI office)." Stejskal then contacted the Los Angeles FBI, whose officers lo- cated the woman in AP PHOTO the Hollywood Hills area, along with the University's Picasso, titled "Sketches froma Window." No arrests have been made in connection with the case and the wnman is not a suspect "She said that she recieved them House passes bil to avoid shutdown WASHINGTON (AP) - With Re- publicans bruised by two government shutdowns, the House overwhelmingly approved legislation yesterday to keep federal agencies running through March 15. The White House said President Clinton would sign it as the yearlong budget fires cooled on all fronts. After settling an impasse with the White House over abortion restrictions and spending levels, the House voted 371-42 fora stopgap measure that would temporarily finance dozens of federal agencies, though at lower levels than 1995. The Senate was expected to ap- prove the legislation today. "Let's quit wasting the taxpayers' money," said House Appropriations Committee Chairman Bob Livingston (R-La.), the GOP's rallying cry all year. But reflecting his party's new, less con- frontational mode, he added, "Let's keep the government open." "We're satisfied that a lot of give- and-take has produced an agreement the president can live with," White House spokesman Mike McCurry said. Lawmakers had faced a deadline tonight that if breached would see civil servants furloughed for an em- barrassing third time since Novem- ber. After taking a drubbing in public opinion polls for their confrontational tactics, Republicans were no longer vowing to halt government's most basic functions unless their demands for a balanced budget in seven years were met. With this fall's elections on their minds, both sides seemed to feel the best path, for now, was to settle immediate differences and save their most stubborn disputes over Medi- care, Medicaid and welfare until next year. WARREN ZINN/Daily A roof with a view The Michigan Campus as seen from the top of the Graduate Library. Renovations will continue on the roof until the summer as part of large scale construction on campus. New U.S. $100 bill wories Russians -. ~ ..~4,.va' The Washington Post MOSCOW - American media events tend not to get much notice in Russia. John Wayne Bobbitt was never a household name in Moscow. The Million Man March was greeted with a shrug. Even O.J. failed to register. But when the U.S. Treasury Depart- ment said it would introduce a rede- signed $100 bill in February, the an- their retirements. Slick New Russians in Moscow peel them from fat wads to pay for dinner, a sports car or a new dacha in the country. Mafia dons carry U.S. hun- dreds around in attache cases. Now, with the introduction of the new hundreds just weeks away, Rus- sians have a serious case of the jitters. Conditioned by repeated ruble "re- forms" during the years - most re- Toyou, The Michigan Daily may look and- J'feel the same as ever today. For some of us, we will never look at the Daily the same way, and it certainly feels different. This is the last Daily produced under the supervision of the outgoing group of editors. As you read this, incoming editors have already taken the reins. We stated in this space a-year ago that it was our goal to put out the best college newspaper in the country. Whether we have succeeded is for I I