Page 10-Sunday, March 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily 0 EVENTS TO COMMEMORATE SHAPIRO'S INAUGURATION Activities set or inaugural year By JULIE ENGEBRECHT In addition to the activities planned for the day of Presi- dent Shapiro's inauguration, events are planned throughout the year to commemorate the installation of the new president. The special activities began at the beginning of this month and will continue through the next school year. Shapiro requested that there be an academically-oriented aspect to the inauguration, according to Jim Shortt, who is the University official in charge of the events. But because the da'ys near the time of the actual inauguaration are crowded with activities, a series of "State of the Discipline" addresses willl be sponsored by the University in the academic year 1980-81. "The idea was to have intellectual accompaniment to the pomp and circumstance and ritualistic- part of the ceremony," said acting Vice President for Academic Affairs Alfred Sussman, who is currently making arrangements for the speeches that will be given by "Nobel prize types.'' "It is to extend the recognition of the new president beyond a specific occasion and also to bring intellectual enrichment to the Uiiversity community," Sussman said. Every Night Gathering Place of the Week The University Activities Center (UAC) is sponsoring an inaugural ball, which will be held on Thursday, April 17 According to UAC officer Gina Ceisler, all students, facult;O staff, and alumni are invited to the ball, which will feature the Tommy Dorsey band. Shortt said Shapiro agreed to the idea on the condition that students could afford to attend. Students who wish to attend will have to pay $10 per couple, or $6 per individual. The cost is slightly higher for faculty, staff, and alumni. Another major event scheduled in conjunction with the inauguration is an exhibition prepared by the Michigan Historical Collections on past presidents of the University. "We consider it kind of our responsibility to the University," said Richard Doolen, assistant director of th* collections. The Bentley Library on North Campus which houses the collection serves' as the archives for papers, photographs, and letters of University presidents. Doolen said the exhibition, which begin a week before the inauguration in the Rackham galleries, will feature photographs, reproductions of documents, and other items that focus on the University during the eras of different presidents. ~'ulidta: MR. ORANGEMAN'S DAY Orange Blossom Special Boilermakers-Irish Whiskey and Beer apinro n -...'U' President recognized uanbtU ST. PATRICK'S DAY GALA CELEBRATION Shapiro inauguration scheduled " Green Beer " Irish Cocktails * Irish Music " Party Favors for All " Hors d'oeuvres giv 4. 'p " II . l (Continued from Page 1) Individual schools, colleges, depar- tments, and other units sponsoring special inaugural activities will most likely pay for those events through the discretionary funds of deans and depar- tments. Any cost incurred in any ad- ditional events is not included in the $25,000 figure cited by Shortt. THE MAJOR expenses for the inauguration include the rental of academic robes, a luncheon for delegates at about $7 per person, a public reception, postage, tours, decorations for Hill Auditorium, and parking. Printing costs take up one-half of the money. About 2,500 invitations have been mailed out. When former University President Robben Fleming was inaugurated in March 1968, the estimated cost of that day's activities was also around $25,000. Fleming's inauguration was attended by twice as many official delegates, creating the major difference when in- flation is taken into account. Protocol requires that two groups of people be invited to bniversity's inauguration - official delegates and special guests. SPECIAL GUESTS include represen- tatives from foundations, associations and corporations; state and federal of- ficials; University benefactors; friends and family of the Shapiros; represen- tatives of the media; and selected alumni, staff, faculty, and students. For the benefit of both students and professors, there will probably be an option to cancel classes for the day in a manner similar to the way it has been done for honors convocations in the past. Th.e official delegates invited are representatives of the colleges, univer- sities, and learned soci'eties. Invitations have been sent to the president of each college or university with an enrollment of 5,000 or more and with a doctoral program. Major foreign universities have also been asked to send delegates. The president can either choose to attend him or herself, or appoint a delegate - often an area alumnus - to represent the institution. SHORTT SAID many University professors will probably be attending as delegates of the college or university from which they received degrees. The official delegates will number between 400 and 500, according to Shor- tt. Other noted institutions bypassed by the numerical cut-off have also been in- vited. When Fleming was inaugurated as president, every school with an enrollment of 1,50Q or more was invited. The delegates numbered 1,100 that year. Speakers at the inaugural ceremony include Lt. Gov. James Brickley; Ir- ving Shane, chancellor of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin at Madison; Hannah Gray, University of Chicago; Robert Briggs, Regent Emeritus and president of the Alumni Association; Richard Corpron, Senate Assembly chairman; Jim Alland, MSA president; and Saul Hymans, chairman of the Economics Department. REGENT ROBERT Nederlander (D- Birmingham), who headed the presidential selection committee, will officially inaugurate the new president. Shapiro will give an inaugural address. And as with any event which requires a formal invitation, there are those who have to be left out. Members of the faculty invited include deans, depar- tment chairpersons, and distinguished faculty members. Students invited in- clude Michigan Student Assembly members,, the presidents of school and college governments, and officers of several major student organizations. Shortt said the invitation process has been a rather sensitive one. Some faculty members wonder why they didn't get an invitation while one of their friends did. LAST WEEK, a secretary in one University office told another secretary about one instance in which one professor ih the department received an invitation addressed to 'Prof. and Mrs.', while another one was addressed only to 'Prof.' Shortt said these problems arise when they don't know if a professor is married or not. A line on the return card which allows for an 'I' or 'We' response takes care of this, he said. Tickets remaining after RSVP's are returned will be distributed to faculty and students on a first come, first ser- ved basis toward the end of March, ac- cording to Shortt. He also said if there was a great demand, closed circuit TV coverage of the inaugural ceremony would be con- sidered. The inaugural committee, which is largely ceremonial, represents many different parts of the University, in- cluding students, faculty, printing, parking, security, and housing people, and President Shapiro's wife, Vivian. STUDENTS WILL play an important part in the inaugural celebration, ac- cording to Shortt. He said Shapiro specifically requested that students have an opportunity to be involved in the ceremony. According to inaugural committee member Jeanne Barr - who represen- ts the Michigan Student Assembly - the presidents of school and college governments and MSA officers will all don academic costume for the ceremony. Barr, also said students would have an opportunity to act as hosts at the public reception held on the inaugural day. Many of the inaugural events, such as a concert performed by music school students and faculty, have been plan- ned at the Shapiros' request, Mason said. The concert, headed up by School of Music Dean Paul Boylan, also an inaugural committee member, involves a chorus of 300 and an orchestra of 120 students. "It's the best way the School of Music can show its enthusiasm and gratitude," Boylan said. "There are a lot of testimonies that come from the inside and outside. Music is our thing and we're doing our thing." Networks to run captions for deaf WASHINGTON (AP) - After months of preparation, NBC, ABC, and PBS tonight will inaugurate a new service designed to open the world of prime-time TV to Americans with impaired hearing. The new "closed captioning" ser- vice is being launched before thefir- st batch of special TV set decoders have even been delivered to the public. But enthusiasm for the project's start-up has built to the point that first lady Rosalynn Carter has scheduled a reception Wed- nesday for the officials most in- volved in making it happen. The new service involves the tra n-, smission of regular prime-time programs with written captions, similar to but more complete than subtitles in foreign films. The system is considered "closed" because the captions will not be visible without a special decoder, which Sears, Roebuck & Co. is selling for $249.95. The decoders were prominently featured in Sears' spring catalog with a notation that orders would not be filled until Mar- ch 15. FEDERAL OFFICIALS estimate 14 million Americans have impaired hearing and that two million of them are totally deaf. The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare announced final plans for the new system in March 1979, with then-Secretary Joseph Califano declaring it was time "for .the nation's deaf and hearing impaired people to enjoy television." A Lenten Seminar on Conditions In, Alternatives For, and Christian Responses To Incarceration GABRIEL RICHPRD CENTER Next To St. Mary's Student Chapel 331 Thompson St., Ann Arbor Monday, March 17, 7:00 P.M. TOPIC: Life Inside: A Panel Discussion by Inmates of the Federal Correctional Institution, Milan. MODERATOR: Father Bob Schulze, Chaplain FCI, Milan Monday, March 24, 7:00 P.M TOPIC: Alternatives TdoILockup SPEAKER: Marc Mauer, American Friends Service Committee, Michigan Council on Crime and Delinquency Monday, March 31, 7:00 P.M. TOPIC: The Ex-Offender: Hopes and Struggles: A Panel Discussion by Ex-Offenders from State and Federal Prisons MODERATOR: Father Bob Schulze and Marcia Krook Child Care Will Be Provided Students tour engineering school I I THE Alaskan King Crab ONLY $7.95 By BETH PERSKY More than 400 high school seniors, their parents, and engineering fresh- persons were treated to tours, demon- strations, and prizes yesterday at the 20th annual Engineering Technology Day at Chrysler Center on North Cam- pus. According to Engineering Council President Carol McGill, the program was held to attract high school students to the University's engineering program, and to inform the engineering freshpersons about the wide variety of offerings in the college. THE PARTICIPANTS received tours of the college's facilities, including the plasma lab and the Phoenix nuclear reactor. Events also included a tune-up clinic, in which 28 winners of a random drawing held Thursday night observed an automobile tune-up by the Society of Automotive Engineers. The American Society of Civil Engineers sponsored a toothpick bridge contest, and the builders of the strongest bridges received trophies and calculators as prizes. According to Tech Day Chairman Mike Behounek, invitations to the ac- tivity were sent to all 700 high schools within a 150-mile radius of Ann Arbor, High school seniors accepted to tht* engineering college also were invited. 1 McGill explained that Tech Day is of- ten the "major deciding factor" in a student's decision to attend the Univer- sity. Lake Orion senior Kevin Wrest said he has "always wanted to come to Michigan, but Tech Day "strengthened his desire" to do so. Colombian 0 INCRED EDIL LEG . . I! CATTTUUD 1lT N c ;; A hto in re ad c 3vu In, E AFRICA- The Year of the Child conference focussing on e problems of children~- a region marked by- pression and revolution- ddressing the themes of Health and Childhood t Education and Childhood .The Impact of Social Dislocation on the Young MARCH 17 19,1980 - -1 militants get asylum offer BOGOTA, Colombia (AP)--Cuban President Fidel Castro has offered asylum to guerrillas holding a estimted two dozen hostages includin; the U.S. ambassador and 18 other foreign diplomats in the Dominican Republic Embasssy, a Colombian newspaper reported yesterday. The newspaper, El Tiempo, said the offer of asylum- was relayed to Colombian President Julio Cesar Turbay' Ayala in a message sent by Castro on Friday. THE M-19 GUERRILLAS holding hostages in the Dominican Republic Embassy here belong to a shadowy* nationalist group whose leadership is vague and whose roots go back to the ideal of a populist dictator who could not make his programs work. The guerrilla organization advocates socialism but shuns most other leftist groups, including the communists. Unlike leftist movements in many other Latin American countries, it has no visible support among the masses and r ''a S fr 'SA2 :i _ j' ' .G;Y;c ;.i ".! C >t y, ".G i = .. r" t r ' . . ' a. ."- Complete 'Alaskan King Crab Leg Dinner N. 0. Served with a crisp green salad, vegetable, bread and your choice of baked potato, French fries, or long grain and wild rice. LOUNTAI _ _ ~ Schedule: t)++dy.IarA h17- ApdI lucid" 3:U ?.-Olt /i p, Pan at nci Ic d Ch., i ldren ,,, i S,,h 5/ F A _ r {tV . I &.rr/, L-, (?)? -7//3 64 551/3 c,,,i, :S,,whr- 4frrt: The I r