The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 28, 1979-Page 11 Fleming reflects on term at 'U' Campus days marked by activism, tight budgets By SARA ANSPACII Except for an occasional meeting with college interns, Robben Fleming doesn't see many students anymore. But from his office in Washington, D.C. where he now leads the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the former University president said he looks upon the eleven years when encounters with students were daily occurrences as the "greatest experience" of his life. The years from 1967 to 1978 weren't easy years for a university president. Fleming came to Ann Arbor from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in the peak of student turmoil on campus. "In those years the president spent a lot of his waking hours on the problem of student turmoil," Fleming said. ONE HAD to recognize that the problems bothering young people were genunine social problems. "I didn't always like the way they tried to solve them, but many of their complaints were justified." "I always believed that you did not solve problems by using troops or tear gas," he said. Although he admitted that police were sometimes necessary in curbing violent students, Fleming said he strongly believes in "finding solutions without force." Fleming and his administration came under much fire during their first years. Criticism came from around the nation for what many called Fleming's lenient attitudes toward student protests. Students, too, often were frustrated bacause the president didn't always give way to their demands. "OUR POSITION wasn't always very popular," Fleming remembered. "But we stuck to it, and by and large came out of it without the long term animosities and hatreds, some schools, like Kent State, had." In subsequent years, turmoil died down and financial problems emerged to keep the president's waking hours occupied. Trying to combat the "ever- rising" student tuition and keep faculty salaries on a competitive level in an era of inflation were Fleming's goals before his resignation in 1978. Life wasn't all grim as president, and Fleming recalls the many accom- plishments of his administration. He said he is pleased the University main- tained its high academic standing during his presidency, and speaks with pride of his efforts to open the Univer- sity to minorities. Both the Flint cam- pus and the Dearborn campuses became four-year institutions under Fleming, and on Central Campus recreation facilities were expanded. FLEMING IS especially proud the University is a place for free exchange of ideas. "There is, and was, and I think always will be, freedom on campus to hear controversial views," he said. During the next decade the new University president will encounter the ever-present financial problems, said Fleming. He or she will also have to confront the "very uneasy relation- ship" developing between both state and lederal governments and the University, the former president ad- ded. "Giving the governments power to direct and control the things we do can be very dangerous to a university," he said. FLEMING LAUGHED when he said he found it "amusing" to read descrip- tions of "qualities" needed to be a University president. He said univer- sity presidents are often described as "paragons of virtue" that few' people ever come close to such glowing profiles. The president-emeritus, does, however, have a few beliefs of his own on the qualities necessary for a good president. "He (or it could be 'she, Fleming stressed) must understand what a great university is all about," said Fleming: "He should come from the academic world." "IT'S TOO complex to be a learner's job," he continued, adding that a president should have experience in administration. "It should be someone who is suf- ficiently flexible. He should not have rigid views about how everything should be done," he said. Fleming added integrity, dignity, sheer physical energy and a spouse who fits well into the university community to his list of essentials for a good university president. The former president said, reflecting upon his eleven years as chief executive of the University, "Yeah, it's a great job." Daily Photo FORMER UNIVERSITY President Robben Fleming is now the head of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in Washington D.C. Fleming served as president at the University from 1967 until 1978. Two college students plan Iong moped trip (Continued fromPage2GEPHART SAID he plans to keep a crunch, he's been noticing more and diary of his trip and will eventually more mopeds on the street and finds write a book. car drivers are learning to accept The biggest problems he figures he them. and Canning will encounter are flat He said his machine runs at about 28 tires, burned out headlights and fouled mph and is much handier than a car spark plugs, since he can chain it on the sidewalk "In case of a major breakdown, like a bicycle instead of having to look 'we've made arrangements with Puch to for a parking space. help us out," Gephart said. Receive The Daily daily! Subscribe-Call 764-0558 Woody Allen's 1968 TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN An early Allen film that is really a string of sight gags and one-liners a la Marx Brothers-but it probably gets as many laughs per foot as any film ever made. Allen, as "hardened" criminal Virgil Starwell, who could commit an pet theft and get caught and make it stick as grand larceny in court, wil probably not scare you straight. But it includes other valua le object lessons: what not to use from your-cellblock to carve a gun and how to dress for a hot date. SHORT: SCREEN TEST Caroline and Frank MOURIS (1977) CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH$AUD 7~OI~~ $150 rmCNEMA I I I1 I LION Presents ON'w LION IN WINTER4 (ANTHONY HARVEY, 1968) Winner of three Academy Awards, this colorful and exciting portrayal of King Henry I (PETER O'TOOLE) captures the pomp pagentry and pride of England during his reign. KATHERINE HEPBURN won an Oscar for her spec, tacular performance as the silvery-tongued Queen Eleanor of Acquitane. These two magnificent performers enact a conflict of rare personal power and historical scope. A real treat for Hepburn fans! (134 min) 7:30, 9:45 Aud A Angell Hall $1.50 0 r 'A J