eather onight: Partly cloudy, low n mid 50s. omorrow: Partly sunny igh in mid 70s. icr1a Unt One hundred five years of editorzalfreedom Friday September 29, 1995 Vol SV# No. #Ii A , h~ N:. I Decision leaves 2 major 'U openings By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter James J. Duderstadt, who has served as the 11th president of the University since 1988, announced yesterday that he will retire from his post June 30, 1996. "I feel like the burden of 37,000 sons and daughters has been relieved," Duderstadt said yesterday in an inter- view with The Michigan Daily. "I've completed everything that was on my original listrThe next challenges w'zuld take too much time to achieve - they would require at least another five to 10 years." The announcement leaves the Uni- versity with gaping holes at the top of the administration. Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr. left the No. 2 spot of provost at the beginning of the semester. Duderstadt said he will remain at the University as a professor of science and engineering and that he has no inten- tions of accepting a presidential post at another university. "I've done that gig; I've done that bit," Duderstadt said. "I have no plans to do it again." The University Board of Regents re- l ased a statement yesterday accepting Duderstadt's decision "with regret." The regents will now comprise the search committee for a new president. Duderstadt said he is leaving his post proud of the University's current status. "The growing diversity of the cam- pus is important, our academic quality is higher than it's ever been, and we're hitting our Campaign for Michigan goal this year," Duderstadt said. "Looking around we've completed $1 billion of renovations on the Ann Arbor campus - almost everything's been rebuilt." Harold Shapiro, University president from 1981-87, said Duderstadt deserved praise for his accomplishments. "It takes vision and courage to break new ground," Shapiro said. "He served the University very well and I'm very sorry to see him go." But Duderstadt said the decision to leave is not without regrets. "I would have liked to have achieved more of an appreciation from the resi- dents of Michigan for what a great institution this is," Duderstadt said. "I wish I could have been more ofa cheer- leader for the institution. It always oc- curs to me that the further you go the more highly regarded we are." Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) Cochran n plea to Sir Newsday LOS ANGELES - Lead defense Johnnie Cochran Jr. urged the juror O.J. Simpson case yesterday to searc hearts and minds and make a stand corruption in the criminal justice sys rejecting the police evidence and ac Simpson in the murders of his ex-w Ronald Goldman. "One of the things that has made this so great is people's willingness to stand say, 'That's wrong; I'm not going to be . . . . ......... . In his eighth year as the leader of the University, President JamesJ. Duderstadt is .0. Duderstadt's lasting a Lawmaker says 'U' should legacy, Page 3 next close search, Page 4 Why other presidents stepped down, Page 5 Students* shocked; opinions are mied By Kiran Chaudhri Daily Staff Reporter The general consensus was shock; after that, the reactions to President James J. Duderstadt's resignation an- nouncement varied widely. "I think it's very surprising," said LSA sophomore Yejide Peters. "Ev- eryone thought he was going to be here forever. Maybe it's best for him - he had to make a personal -decision and sometimes that comes before business." Peters also expressed concern over the search for a new president. "I think it's going to obviously lead to an up- heaval. But hopefully, they'll be able to initiate a smooth transition," she said. Dan Serota, an LSA sophomore and the Michigan Student Assembly's chair for academic affairs, voiced similar con- cerns. "I hope that the search for the new president is an open search where stu- dents are given the time and opportunity to look at the candidates and give input to the search committee," Serota said. Some students viewed Duderstadt's term very critically, and said they look forward to a better leader. "I remember when they were talking about getting Duderstadt elected -the TAs wanted us to sign petitions not to get him elected," said Architecture graduate student Gerri Little. "They portrayed him as an 'evil character' who didn't seem for the people. "I've seen what he's done.... I would rather see him spending money on the quality of education rather than on the infrastructure. I'm ready for a change of leadership so that other agendas can be followed," Little added. Brian Gorman, a Social Work post- doctoral student, said Duderstadt "is not interested in true equality. He is nothing more than a politically correct socialist. His resignation did not come soon enough." Other students expressed concern over the status of minority programs at the University. Duderstadt was known for his role as pioneer of the Michigan Mandate, which worked to increase the number of students and faculty of color. "It sounded like Duderstadt wanted the University to become the leader in affirmative action, and it sounded like it was his leadership that would head that," said LSA senior Abe Bates. MSA Rep. Fiona Rose, an LSA sophomore, predicted Duderstadt's res- ignation will be a loss to students look- See STUDENTS, Page 2 JONATHAN LURIE/Daily University President James J. Duderstadt gives a telephone interview yesterday after announcing hisdecision to resign in June. "1 feel like the burden of 37,000 sones and daughters, has been relieved" -James J. Duderstadt University President said he and the other board members were notified of Duderstadt's inten- tions by a fax yesterday morning. "This is a surprise," Baker said. "But the world is full of surprises, and he has said over the months and years that he has thought of retiring." Gov. John Engler said through his press secretary, John Truscott, that some Democrats on the board had forced Duderstadt to leave. Truscott would not say who the governor's source was. Truscott also said Engler wants the power to appoint members to govern- ing boards at the three state universities where they are elected - Michigan State University, Wayne State Univer- sity and the University of Michigan. "I think a lot of it was based on person- alities and (the regents) wanted more stroking than (Duderstadt) wanted to give them," Truscott said. "The governor is aware of some things internally that some people were trying to get him to leave." Vice President for University Rela- tions Walter Harrison, however, said there was no truth to the claim. "I think the governor is dead wrong about why Jim retired - he made a decision after eight years, that's all," Harrison said. The announcement comes at a vola- tile time for the University, which cur- rently has five interim deans and execu- tive officers. "This University is so decentralized that there's no one or two changes even at the top that are going to disrupt it," said interim Provost J. Bernard Machen. "It might be difficult to replace some of the interim positionswithpermanent people, though." Machen's own position as interim provost is now in flux, as a search committee recently narrowed its candi- dates to a pool of five. The provost reports directly to the president, who must approve the ap- pointment. "No one has made a substantive deci- sion at this time, and we have to decide whether (a provost search) worth going through with," Harrison said. "We have two choices - one is we can go for- ward and attempt to find the best per- son. Two is that we don't go forward and we allow the president to choose Other Vacancies Provost: Gilbert R Whitaker Jr. retired. Bernard Machen serving as interim. Engineering Dean: Peter Banks left for private business. Glenn Knoll serving as interim. Natural Resources and Environment Dean: Garry Brewer stepped down. Vice President for Development: Thomas Kinnear serving as interim. his own provost." Machen also said that Duderstadt's retirement may prolong the search for provost. "Most of the people who answer di- rectly to the president are going to want to wait to make a decision until they know who they're working for," Machen said. "We had a provost candidate on See DUDERSTADT, Page 2 Hakes fiery final npson jurors Palestinians, settlers protest peace accord inMideast lawyer s in the ch their against tem by quitting ife and country up and part of went to his home on the morning after the murders of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Goldman. He also asked the predominantly black jury to recall the testimony ofKathleen Bell and Roderick Hodge, who said that Fuhrman had told them that if he didn't have a reason to arrest a black, he would find one, and that he had expressed hatred toward interracial couples. Cochran alleged that the seeds of Fuhrman's hatred toward Simpson were sown in 1985, when he responded to a domestic violence call from Nicole Simpson. HEBRON, West Bank (AP) - As Israel and the PLO sealed a West Bank autonomy accord yesterday, hard-line Israelis marched in Hebron to accuse their government of trea- son and anti-Israel protests erupted in a refugee camp. Still, most Israelis and Palestinians appeared indifferent or ambivalent to the long-awaited accord, which trans- fers one-third of the West Bank to PLO leader Yasser Arafat's control after a gradual withdrawal of Israeli occupa- tion troops from West Bank towns. The White Hunse siinino ceremonv. with a strike call by the Muslim militant group Hamas. But Palestinians in seven other West Bank towns did not, indicat- ing growing support for Arafat. A survey conducted among Palestin- ians indicated that while 70 percent are in favor ofpeace talks, 60 percent doubt they will lead to a lasting peace with Israel. The survey had a margin of error of 3 percent. Another survey published yesterday indicated that only 51 percent of Israe- lis support the new peace agreement, while 47 percent oppose it. The poll had a margin of error of 4 nercent. &711171mml I