The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 28, 1987- Page 5 Goodbye Reception honors Shapiro's departure By KATHERINE BEITNER The peaceful melody of Pacabel's Canon and the aroma of maize and blue flowers filled the Michigan Union's Kuenzel room yesterday as President Harold Shapiro bade farewell at an afternoon reception. The Student Organization Development Center and the Michigan Student Assembly co- Ssponsored the event. Tradition dictates the president to host a tea at his house every fall but, since this will be Shapiro's last term, the students decided to hold a frception for him. , MSA President Ken Weine said, "We planned this reception to give students their last opportunity to express their feelings and opinions to Dr. Shapiro, hoping he will relay these feelings to the next president." Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson said, "I'll miss the president and I enjoyed working with him. He's done a fine job and I wish him well." Several students attended the reception. "I wanted to say goodbye to Harry and I couldn't resist the harp music," said graduate student Basil Kiwan LSA sophomore Andrea Adler said, "I went to the President's open LSA junior and co-president of the East Quad Bridge Club, Belinda Pett said "I decided to come because I thought it would be interesting to see the people that run this University." Both Bridge Club presidents attended the send-off. Not everyone came just to say goodbye to the president. "I came to talk about important issues. Shapiro has a responsiblity to help the new president understand the key issues. Michigan Video Yearbook executive producer Brenda Aaronson, was at the reception and said the event will appear in the '88- 89 edition of the video yearbook. Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity member and MSA representative George Davis said "Although we've had our differences I'd like to send Shapiro off knowing we do respect him." Although the crowd consisted mostly of students, University of Cincinnati professor, Alvin Crawford,. who is in the middle of a four-day stay as a Martin Luther King/ Ceasar Chavez/ Rosa Parks program visiting professor, said, "I made this reception a part of my agenda so that I could have the opportunity to visit briefly with President Shapiro." 'I'll miss the president and I enjoyed working with him. He's done a fine job and I wish him well.' - Henry Johnson,Vice President for Student Services house freshman year and had a great time talking to him so I thought I'd come back." Yet when I talked with him today he skirted the issues," said LSA junior Ben Esner. Colleagues admire Fleming (continued from Page 1) In 1942, Fleming's career as a labor lawyer ended. He married Sally in the spring and was drafted a few ponths later. "The army rescued me. ( got drafted so I couldn't be exposed for how little I knew," he said. M When World War II ended, Yleming took a "stop-gap" job in Washington. He had "never ever" considered teaching law, but a rofessor-on-leave he met in Washington told Fleming to look into academia. "I sort of dismissed the idea," he said, folding his arms. "I really Honestly couldn't see why anybody yould like me to teach." But "out of the clear blue sky," the University of Wisconsin offered Fleming the opportunity to teach in their new unit on labor management problems. He and Sally decided that Madison was a good place to raise Aheir first child, Nancy, and he took ,the position. ; "Had the war not intervened, I probably would be practicing law ,somewhere today," he said pensively. AFTER teaching for 17 years at .Madison and the University of Illinois, Fleming became the chancellor of the University of Wisconsin. Three years later, he received simultaneous offers to become president of the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan. "I decided to come to Michigan because its reputation as a university was very high, and I thought it was more like Wisconsin," he said. "I had lectured here occasionally in my years as a professor, but I really didn't know the University at all." Fleming arrived just in time for the Vietnam and BAM protests, but unrest was nothing new to him. University administrators, regents, and student leaders agree that Fleming's labor management skills brought the University through the turbulent 60's with minimal damage, no a simple feat in the days when the Wisconsin suffered full- scale riots and bombings. "My first recollection of him was in (the administration building) on the night we had about 3,000 students down on the Regents' Plaza protesting, of all things, the bookstore issue," said Vice President for Government Relations Richard Kennedy. The University's Board of Regents was hesitant to grant students complete oversight of the' bookstore in the Union, and the protesters staged a sit-in in the LSA Building. "I remember Bob Fleming in the lobby of the second floor... kind of watching the whole affair," he said. "I remember him nacinao and "That threat was always with you - the fear that something like the bombings at Wisconsin could happen here," said Kennedy. "(Fleming) was masterful in the way he managed to get the University through those years without any real disasters." Even students who protested against Fleming were quick to praise his ability to handle dissent. During the BAM protest in 1970, Black student leader Evelyn Moore repeat- edly told Fleming, "You don't understand what I'm telling you." He countered, "Oh I understand what you're telling me. We just don't agree." Seventeen years later, Moore maintains Fleming was a fair, open administrator. "You knew where he was coming from, and what his position was," she said. Henry Grix, the 1969-70 editor of The Daily, agreed. "He was able to keep the faculty calm, and the students calmer than they otherwise would have been," he said. DESPITE the many protests,. Fleming remained unflappable. According to his wife Sally, "He never panicked during all of that period. He knew there was some way of working through this thing." Dolly Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Come and get 'em LSA sophomore Negina Noack sells pumpkins to first-year law students Don Su llivan, right, and Rob Sussman yesterday. Which One? Would you rather drive? We have the Fastest, Self-Serve Copiers Highest Quality in Ann Arbor! Fleming ... to return as interim University president. worrying about making sure nobody got hurt, the kids especially." MORE than 100 students were arrested that night, in what turned out to be the largest campus protest ever. But nobody got hurt. ''Crowd hears rebels Test "Drive" one of our High Performance Machines Today. If it's not the Best Copy you can make in Ann Arbor, the copies are FREE! DOLLAR BILL COPYING 611 Church 665-9200 Open 7 Days (Continued from Page 3) "The College Republicans hope to increase student awareness of the situation in Nicaragua. We want people to hear the side of the story that is most often neglected on campus." But any disruptions last night were tame compared with protests that postponed an appearance by the two Contra officials Monday at Wayne State University. "The meeting turned into a shouting match between Contra supporters and opponents, and had to be moved to a new location, with the demonstrators not being allowed in," said Vince Kern, editor-in-chief of the campus newspaper, the Wayne State South End. New M-Th Fri Sat. Sun Hours: 7:45-Midnight 7:45-9:00 p.m. 10:00-5:00 p.m. 12:00-9:00 p.m. " 1- , :.. 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