THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday January 24, 1914 THE MICHiGAN DAILY Thursday, January 24, 19/4 rice president Smith retires; o assume law teaching post I (Continued from Page 1) to growth." While the projection showed steady growth, "the reality began to be, 'ypu can't do it'," Smith says. During Smith's nine years as vice president, his power to form University policy has nowhere been as evident as in financial decision- making. Along with Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont, Smith makes the Uni- versity's month-to-month budget al- locations and prepares far-reaching financial plans ranging from yearly budget proposals sent to the state legislature to trend projections for years to come. And although Smith denies that he plays hatchet.man for Fleming, his role as a financial officer has involved saying no to a vast array of financial requests. "I HAVE TO say no quite often but that's not a contrived role," Smith says. "Mr. Fleming shares all the budget decisions. I say a lot of yeses too, that make people happy." Although officials have recently maintained a eulogistic hush with regard to Smith's vice presidential tenure, many still temper their praise with apologies .for Smith's detractors. Social work Prof. Frederick Goodman, chairman of the Senate Assembly Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), the faculty gov- erning body's executive committee, says of Smith: "Anybody who plays that role for a long time can find a lot of people he's said no to, but he's also said yes to a lot of people." "THERE'S NO DOUBT that he's been the no-sayer for the Univer- sity," Goodman adds. Vice President for Student Ser- vices Henry Johnson says Smith is "an extremely fair man, when presented with facts." According to Assistant Vice Pres- ident for Student Services Tom Easthope, "After historydgets added up sometime in the distant future, students are going to find he wasn't the big bad boogie man they thought." i minds of some he's thought of as negative and the 'no man'." "This is not true," Haber claims. "He's a strong man and when he says no it's not out of weakness." If these observers damn Smith with faint praise, the causes lie in the ways Smith has used his strength. Well-known to reporters for a tight-lipped, no-comment stance on administrative machina- tions, Smith has acted as a bul- wark of traditional educational values against faculty and student pressure for re-ordered priorities. too big a term, I hope." "There's always a lot of non-j sense about secret meetings and secret decisions," he concludes. "For most of the committees where the decisions are kicked around, it's hard to get students to stay, because it's terribly dull work. We don't get together and make excit- ing decisions; we worry." SMITH'S EXPLANATION 'of stu- dent "worry" about administration power does not include students' sense that Smith himself is not interested in their views. A MIDNIGHT SALE 25% OFF SPRING WEAR 35% OFF WOOLS & KNITS FRIDAY, JAN. 25 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. 1317 S. UNIVERSITY (NEXT TO THE V. BELL) 4 :fix,', 'e ' as;' -r ! : : 'N .\ THIS FALL, THE student body One student particularly quali- was treated to a dramatic repre- fied to comment on Smith's han- sentation of Smith's decision- dling of student requests is Laurie making style, as the administration Effron, a representative of . the revealed a series of partial ac- Organization of Teaching Fellowsl countings for the tuition increase, who participated in negotiations always holding back a full revela- with Smith. tion of the figures on the basis of "I didn't really trust him," Ef- various "contingencies." fron says. "His atitude was a lot When the tuition increase proved less compromising toward us thanI excessive, Smith, Fleming and Fleming's. I didn't get the feeling Pierpont virtually divided the we had any impact." extras by fiat, sidestepping the Budget Priorities Committee, the SMITH, SHE SAYS, "didn't seem only body that through student to be very interested in our prob- representation could logically have lems." added student input to the decision. But Smith insists that the admin- However, Smith attributes Stu- istration followed the correct course dent distrust of the administra- in preparing its fee schedule. "If tion's handling of the hike to "an I were faced again with the situa- inevitable visceral reaction to tion of last August, I'd make the power-'there must be something same decision," he says. g ' "I DON'T THINK students can go to college without worrying~ , NOON LUNCHEON SOUP AND SANDWICH-40c Friday, January 25 PROF. TERRY RICE School of Education: "LOVE AND IDENTITY: THE SEARCH FOR NEW LIFESTYLES" (series: Explorations in Love Relationships: Psychological and Sexual Perspectives) FRIDAY EVENING-6 p.m. California Dinner-$1 .25 (tamale pie, spanish rice, artichokes, assorted fruits) FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 662-5189 GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe A HIGHLY ACCLAIMED DOCUMENTARY FILM "I.F. SOWEEKLY " Narrated by TOM WICKER 4:15 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 23 Modern Languages Bldg., Aud. 4 -SPONSORED BY- The Department of Journalism andj The National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships for Journalists q aE - - - W, - -MM 11 111 11 " I I x about the central administration's power," he says, calling the stu- dent reaction "worry-distrust is '' 'T".:. _I I, THE PRIMO S1OWBAR PRESENTS WED & THUR JAN 23 & 24 4 **** * * * ** ** * TONIGHT Thru SUNDAY At MENDELSSOHN THEATRE The Musical COMPANY Tony Award Winner by STEPHEN SONDHEIM TICKETS at $3.50 and $4.00 by calling 763-1085 Extra Perfs. Sat. 10 p.m. and Sun. 7 p.m. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE * COVER $ 3.00 FRI. JAN. 25: SAT. JAN. 26: SUN. JAN. 27: RABBITS FRUT LUTHER ALLISON EVEN HABER, who asserts that Smith has "managed the academic budget of the University with an unusual degree of understanding of vital academic values and ex-: ceptionally competent administra- tive skills" recognizes that "in the Every Tues-Wed-Thur: Pitcher of Beer SI.75 -17 ") Ast~ilcv"Ann iArbo 1 4 fwl