,w w w w7 w w w v SPECIAL EDITION -U THE *3TH PRESIDENT One hundred eleven years of editorialfreedom *ri NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 7640557 www~michigandally.com Thursday May 30, 2002 - B B t oa U I Regents announce Co eman as rst emale resident By Karen Schwartz and Maria Sprow Daily News Editors Mary Sue Coleman, president of the University of Iowa, was welcomed to the University by the University Board of Regents and community mem- bers yesterday morning as she was elected to be the University's 13th president in a motion carried unanimously by the regents. Coleman, who has been president of Iowa since 1995, will begin her term at the University of Michigan Aug. 1 under a five-year contract set to be finalized at the June regents meeting. "She will be a strong, creative, experienced, thoughtful and successful president of the Universi- ty of Michigan," Regent Rebecca McGowan (D- Ann Arbor) said. "And let it be said again and again, girls can do math and science." Regents also praised interim University President B. Joseph White, expressing gratitude and appreci- ation for his dedication and involvement in keeping the University running smoothly. "The only thing more challenging than being g e . president of this Univer- WVe beleve sity would be beingpr eto e interim president," provet be Regent David Brandong (R-Ann Arbor) said. great Added Regent Kathy University's White (D-Ann Arbor) to White and his wife, - R Mary: "I'm very impressed at (your) deep commitment ... I am basically speechless," she said. Though she was officially appointed, Coleman will remain at Iowa for the next two months. "I have two responsibilities that I have to do going forward," she said, referring to both her posi- tion at Iowa and her need to prepare for her new role in Ann Arbor. White will remain in charge of the University until the beginning of August but said he would confer with Coleman on any major decisions made between now and then. Laurence Deitch (D-Bingham Farms), chair of the Board of Regents and the Presidential Search Committe, said he is confident Coleman is ready for the job. "She was quite simply the best of the best. We think the University and the community will benefit from her leadership, he said. "As an administrator, she's smart and she's tough and she knows how big places like this run." He added that Coleman is well-known in higher education circles and that her name is on "every- body's short list of leaders of higher education." Deitch cited Coleman's achievements and cre- dentials as part of what made her an appealing can- didate, commenting on the breadth of her experiences and involvement in research and a vari- ety of other areas. "We believe she will prove to be one of the great leaders of the University's history," he said. "We will be fortunate to have her." Regarding the search process, Deitch called the r' " search "focused, thorough and thoughtful." Deitch also addressed the contributions of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee, com- posed of faculty, students, staff and alumni, which met 15 times over five months to investigate the pool of candidates. It was "a truly extraordinary commitment by 16 people with very busy lives," Deitch said. The University community at large had a chance to be part of the process as well, as 25 meetings were held to give the community a chance to voice opinions and hopes for the next University leader. "The election of the next president mattered to everyone - everyone cared. It reaffirmed our com- mitment," said Rackham Dean Earl Lewis, chair of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee. Lewis said over 200 people were nominated and reviewed "in one form or another" in a process that "turned nominations into candidates" He said the advisory committee presented a pool of candidates, not finalists, to the regents. "It was a process that we understood required a high level of confidentiality," he said. He added that the job of the search com- mittee was to create a rich she will and deep pool full of can- of the 'didates who were qualified one to lead the University in many different ways. s of the Coleman said that if it history. " had been an open search she would not have con- egent Laurence Deitch sidered candidacy. She is D-Bingham Farms not the only one who would have refused candi- dacy, Lewis said. While Lewis said the openness in Harvard's recent presidential search did not seem to harm for- mer University President Lee Bollinger - who Coleman is replacing - Bollinger was announced last year to be a finalist and then lost to former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Lawrence Summers, he believes Bollinger is the exception to the rule. "Everyone involved are people who are them- selves in a position of responsibility," Lewis said. "In many other instances, individuals will find themselves compramised if they are publicly identi- fied as a candidate in a public search." When asked about a list of finalists, Deitch would not offer a list but said "there is one finalist and she is with us (now)." Making a list of candidates public, even after the announcement, would violate a promise to those who chose to accept their nominations, Lewis said. Though she said she never intended to leave Iowa and was not looking for another job when University committee members asked her to con- sider the position, Coleman said she is happy to be part of the University community and looks for- ward to "the experience of a lifetime." "I just wanted you to know what a thrill this is," she said, adding that part of the thrill of being elect- ed University president comes from her passion for public university education. "I have to tell you, when I called my mother, my 88-year-old mother - she lives in Colorado - she cried and she understood what it meant to be See PRESIDENT, Page 4 ULBBIL MILL/Uaily ABOVE: Mary Sue Coleman, who will begin her term as the 13th president of the University Aug. 1, accepts her new position while addressing members of the University community yesterday inside the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union. LEFT: Coleman listens as Presidential Search Advisory Committee chair and Rackham Dean Earl Lewis tells members of the media why he believes the best candidate possible was given the permanent leadership position at the University during a press conference yesterday morning. Lewis, Coleman and Laurence Deitch, University Board of Regents and Presidential Search Committee chair, addressed audience members' questions during the conference. inside University of Iowa community members react to Coleman's departure. Page3. University tudents react to the regent's decision. Page 3. Coleman, one of few female lead- ers in the Big Ten, is more con- cerned about job than gender. Page 5. Also in this edition Banned Michigan basketball booster Ed Martin pleaded guilty Tues- I. r - I I t.: 1 ~Id White thanked for dedication, commitment during transition By Karen Schwartz and Maria Sprow Daily News Editors The University Board of Regents gave their heartfelt thanks to interim President B. Joseph White yesterday morning for his commitment and contributions in leading the University. "Joe did an excellent job keeping the University together while keening it movinr forward" said Iniversitv Board of sentiments. "To you and Mary, we'll always be indebted for your work,"he said. But the praise for White's work and dedication didn't stop with the regents. Many other members of the University com- munity, including Rackham Dean Earl Lewis, chair of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee, said they felt White had succeeded in what he had set out to do. "I think that Joe did a marvelous job in his interim role. It's hard to be interim. (but) he kent the shin head- White, who began his current position serving the University community Jan. 1, will turn leadership of the 11 v.011