i ,: { R Thursday, September 8, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five ThusdySetebe 8,197 HEMIHIAN AIY ,~ediv Robben Fleming: Gui By BARBARA ZAHS Thos far at the University, he activism has vanished altogeth- If you think that the only pur- T1 OR ROBBEN FLEMING, be- has managed to survive the er. pose of going to college is to get coming -a university presi- troublesome Sixties and econo- "I think you'd have to say now into the job market, you could dent was something that "just micaliy-weary Seventies - but that students are more interest-almost certainly find better kind of happened to me on the not without criticism. He sees ed n the international world ays ofdoing that. Way to the forum. such remarks as inevitable than they were some years ago. "If you think that a college ed- "I in fact, didn't expect to be-however. They're better iniormed about ucation is something more than coea"I festh o(world events)-maybe that's a training for a job, and that it is come a professor even, said the "1 don't mind criticism, be product of television. a broadening of your whole ex- silver-haired Fleming, who as- cause I think if you're going to "I think they're more willing perience for the rest of your sumed the University presidency be an administrator of any kind, lfe hn in 1968. you have to recognize that y to press their points of view. I e, te you wouldifeel that col- Instead of practicing law after will make mistakes because all think' there is a latenat for much richer in terms of you, graduating from the University human beings make mistakes, there that could easily be acti- own stisfaction. I would argue of Wisconsin, he entered the Ar- and, therefore, you're not pos- te thin s ththae i that's always been the key point my just as World War II was sibly going to be right all of the thatatsaid.d during starting. "That caused a chain time. So insofar as people are that period, he said. of events which caused me at criticizing you fbr those kinds of Fleming recognizes that to- LEMING TAKES pride in the end of the war to be invited mistakes, you ought to recognize day's students have a new com- i=oting the accomplishments to come back and join the Wis- that, in part, criticism is justi- .plaint - unemployment. But he of University alumni. "But I consin faculty, which was some- fied." . disagrees with those who say a think I probably feel as much thing I had never anticipated." college education is no longer dakmuch I pride in students who I talk to Fleming and his 'wife, Sally,; WHILE MOST of the turbu- important. who are happy, stable individu- found they liked .the university lence has now passed, Flem- "I say it depends on what you wxoerehapy, se attiu world, and stayed in it. - 1ing doesn't believe that student think a college education is for. experience and whose attitude als and who've just had a fine Jng the'U Because of the size of the Uni "I think aside from maybe versity and the volume of his s curiosity, and wondering what administrative duties, Fleming kind of person the president is, I doesn't have enough time to get suppose most students don't al- to know many students personal- low their lives to be greatly ly. Often, he only encounters . p , those who wish to discuss speci robd smiling, fic problems.sad, smiling. "I don't see a lot of students WHfEN THE 60-year-old Flem- just in their natural habitat or when they just want to have a ing took over the reins of bull session, nor do I get a lot of the University nine years ago, opportunity to just listen to he said he believed no president them argue about things, which should serve longer than 10 is in many ways more helpful to years. Now, as his decade draws me than responding myself to to a close, he is evaluating his questions. performance. Most observers, "I know what I'm going to however, don't expect him to bid say," he said with a laugh, the University adieu. ~"what I don't know is how they "I'm right up against 10 years, may feel about various ques- therefore I've got to face that tions." i decision now. Whatever I have . Not that he's unwilling tIo let to say about-that I will have to students find out more about the say in - the next six months," man who lives in the big, white Fleming said, refusing to elab- house on South University. orate "I often think that when I look He doesn't regret his original back to my own student-days, I statement., "My belief is the didn't regard it as a very high same today as it was then, priority to get to know the presi- which is that a university presi- dent or to see him. I would sus dent may have, id 10 years, ser- pets that's still the attitude of ved as long as he should, and I most students-that they know have no difficulties with that at there's a president and they're all. prepared to assume that he "Whether I should continue must have something to do: beyond that really depends, I around the place, but they don't guess, on whether that would be view him as a person who's im- best for the University - and mediately connected with their that's hot really a decision I problems. should make." : For Hudson Ladd, the bells always toll towards life is a happy, optimis- tic one," he added. "I'm not sure we can claim very much that may be a factor that's more credit for that, because I think related to your family and grow- ing-up experience. "I always feel sorry for the student who really finds it a ra- ther depressing or unhappy ex- perience," he said, shaking his head. "I always keep thinking that it really ought to be a good experience, and it's too bad when it isn't." By RON DeKETT WHEN THE MELODIC ring- ing of bells drifts across campus, many people visualize a gray-haired, hunchbacked old man lurking in the dusty heights of Burton Tower, pounding the bells with a wooden hammer in an effort to keep the ancient art alive. But one look at University Ca- rilloneur Hudson Ladd dispels that notion. The red-haired Ladd, 32, re- flects the dynamic growth of the art of the carillon throughout the United States and Scandi- navian countries. "The first carillon came into North America only 55 years ago. We now have 160 of them,' Ladd said. "It is an art that is attrrcling a large amount of youth today. It is exciting to see ytoung kids really becoming in- vclved with developing marve- lous techniqucs arid making fan- tactic music." Ladd himself became involved with the carillon "purely by ac- cident' "I was in Amsterdam in the summer of 1968, hitchhiking around Europe, and I heard the carillon for the first time in the Oude Kerk (old church). I heard a Bach Prelude and Fugue being played and I said 'This is impos- sible.' Not because it was being- played, but being played music- ally. So I went to the bottom of the tower, and this now good friend of mine refused to let mel up the tower because I had nev- er met him before. I insisted1 that indeed I would go up the tower to see what is going on up there. Finally he acquiesced. I climbed up this old tower, and discevered how the carillon is indeed performed." ADD THEN STUDIED for two years in Europe and receiv- ed a degree with honors from, the Netherlands' Carillonneur School. Later, -he became the! first American to win the pres- tigious Dutch pris d' excellence. Ladd's office is located on the ninth floor of, the Burton Tower -directly beneath the massive bells which weigh a total of 68 tons. The walls are decorated with photographs, awards and a map of the U.S. with stick pins marking the locations of caril- ions. "It's strange, but most of the carillons are located throughout the Midwest and East Coast cor- ridor. But it is slowly developing west of the Mississippi," Ladd said. Ladd credits the art's growth to the increasing recognition of the carillon as a socio-musical instrument. "It is a musical instrument that a city or prominent church or a large university will buy to speak to the whole cor- munity. There-fore, it can he a part of its way of life. It adds charm and uniqueness to a com- munity," Ladd said. TO PLAY THE carillon, Ladd sits in a small room among the bells. He faces a console that is like an exaggerated piano key- See THE BELLS, Page 7 Dalv Photo by -tRIS TINA SNIN Robben Fleming Housemother enjoys By EILEEN DALEY JULIE SULLIVAN SMILES a lot when she talks about her job as housemother at Zeta Tau Alpha sorority., It's a position she's held for nine years, since the firm which employed her as an executive se- cretary depided to move out of town. Rather than leave the Detroit area, Mrs. Sullivan sought a job with the University. When she was offered the position at Zeta Tau Alpha, she happily accepted it. "It's like managing a small hotel," she explain- ed. Mrs. Sullivan plans the meals, orders the food and hires and manages the house staff. A widow whose own children are now grown, Mrs. Sullivan enjoys sharing her time with the women at the sorority. "I think they're really just brilliant," she said.. "They just amaze me. They're so creative! They really just get me." But as fond as she is of "her girls," she doesn't see herself as their "mfother," in spite of her title. "I'M NOT THEIR MOTHER," she said with a smile. "I think I'm more of their friend. They have their own mothers." After spending nearly a decade in the sorority, she has noticed many changes in the women who come to live there. "Oh! We get a variety of girls now," she said enthusiastically. "It has changed a lot and I'm glad. It's good for the house. You need all kinds of girls from all backgrounds. "It used to be that backgrounds were quite im- portant. They (women wishing to pledge) used to have to have references. That is where I think sororities got their stigma. Now we have very wealthy girls and girls who are putting them- selves through college. "The girls are from all fields - nurses, teachers, girls interested in medicine, pharmacy, biochemistry. Some girls go into working with retarded children. "They're not all frorm one class. I think that's gone down the drain," she said, pausing for a moment, then adding, "I think that's growth ac- tually." Mrs. Sullivan has also seen changes in the house rules which the women draw up each year. "You talk about being liberal!" she exclaimed. When she became housemother in 1968, anyone leaving the house for the evening was required to sign out and to return home no later than 11 p.m. her girls' Those returning after that time found the house locked-and themselves in a lot of trouble. "TT USED TO BE, when they signed out-and even the dorms had this-that you started looking for them right away," she recalled., The sign-out policy, however, was discarded within the next few years, and each house mem- ber was given her own key to slip onto her key chain. Some house rules still remain, but Mrs. Sullivan does not find them at all unreasonable. "There are certain rules and regulations like there are in your 'own home," she explained. "It's not a thumb down on anybody's head, for heaven's sake." Male visitation hours is one rule which the Zeta house has retained. "I think you have to give them credit," she said. "I think today's kids are pretty loose in some departments." Mrs. Sullivan has found living with the women very rewarding. "IT'S SO GREAT TO see them come in as fresh- men. They are so naive and this is another world to them. They go out as ladies. They're mature. It's great." Although none of her children or grandchildren have pledged fraternities or sororities, Mrs. Sulli- van is an advocate of Greek life. "I think it's a nice, nice way of living," she said. "If I were going through college again, I would live in a sorority." "You don't have to bother with an -apartment. It's a relaxed way of living. You're here to get an education, not to be cleaning." Mrs. Sullivan noted that women who leave the house to live in apartments often return to the house the following year. "You have all the rest of your life to live in an apartment." Has she found any drawbacks to being a-house- mother? "Oh, heavens no!" she said emphatically. "I'm just sorry I didn't get into it sooner." Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Zeta Tau Alpha Doily Photo by CHRJSTINA SCHNEIDER Hudson Ladd .. Bob Ufer: The man. By CUB SCHWARTZ N FOOTBALL Saturdays he is a fanatic, screaming, cheering, reciting poetry and treating radio listeners to a trip through Mich- igan sports history. But during the rest of the week he is a nor- mal human being, capable of discussing sub- jects other than "Meecheegan" football. He can sit behind his desk at a local insurance agency and talk easijy about the other side of Bob Ufer, the side few people ever see. True, the University of Michigan is a large part of Ufer's life After, listening to one of his broadcasts, one would swear that his life hinges on the outcome of the game. Kirk Lewis, the Wolverines' All American guard, said that listening to a Ufer broadcast was one of the most traumatic experiences he'd ever under- tOne. Ufer himself needs two days to recover from the ordeal. "On Sundays, my head aches, my body aches, and I am totally exhausted, both mentally and physically," Ufer said. "It takes so much nut of me because It nut so much into The work proved too strenuous for Ufer's body, and he awoke one morning in a pool of blood. Doctors found ten inches of his intestines riddled with ulcers, and ordered him to give up sportscasting. Ufer pleaded with the physicians to allow him to continue to do only football- just as a hobby-and they agreed. The health situation today remains largely the same, but even though Ufer has been .hos- pitalized countless times, he has never missed "On Sundays, my head aches, my body aches, and l am total- ly exhausted, b o t h mentally and physically. It t a k e s so much out of me because I put so much into it." -Bob Ufer ... .. . . . . . . . t". a. ' : : :f { : : } ' cersberg Academy, an eastern prep school, where he found track to be his forte. There, he helped set a world record in the 440-yard relay. With that feather in his cap, he set off for the University of Michigan, his parents' alma mater. He participated in both freshman football and track, but the latter brought him the most success. Ufer held frosh records in every event, from the 100-yard dash up to the half-mile run. The aspiring Olympian gave up football to concentrate his efforts upon track: ALTHOUGH HITLER eliminated the Olym- pics in 1940 and 1944, dashing Ufer's dreams, he still managed to set the world in- door record in the 440, a mark which stood for five years. Another of Ufer's triumphs has come, oddly enough, in the field of politics. Although he personally has no political aspirations, he was the emcee last September for then-President Gerald Ford's campaign kickoff in Ann Arbor. "They called me the morning before Ford behind says with a smile. "With 20,000 people scream- ing and the President of the United States it was the highlight of my life." DURING THE course of that evening, Ufer gave Ford a jacket with "MICHIGAN NUM- BER 1" emblazoned in maize letters on the back. When he presented the jacket to Ford, he told the President to put it on-backwards. "It's what they Want," Ufer whispered, "it's P.R.-go ahead." Ford put the jacket on as instructed .and the incident provided- one of the campaign's most memorable photographs. The original photo hangs in Ufer's office with a personal thank you note from Ford on the bottom. But the hype, thesenergy and the craziness which Ufer exhibits often cause people to question his sanity. Once, while coaching a little league baseball team, Ufer pulled his players off the field in the middle of an inning to give them a pep talk. The tactic produced one of his team's 40 consecutive little league victories. the mike