12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 18, 1997 FRIDAYF US /y~a~:; <. >; vI <::..r F 'F iv es club- 0 University president may not have an official place in the Fleming University payroll. Her role is generally not publicly recognize he life of the president's wife is full of societal constraints and 0 0 In I95 wht'Anne HatCh'erleanied1fher tis- band's appointment as University president, her reaction was a solemn one. As the daughter of a professor, Anne Hatcher's upbringing revolved around the world of acade- mia and university campuses. Growing up sur- rounded by faculty members, Hatcher said she developed a mistrust of all higher levels of the administration, making the news of her husband's selection as University president difficult to absorb. "I was opposed to it," Hatcher said. "I knew something like this would happen because he was moving up. This came sooner than I would have hoped." Hatcher said she was distressed because she feared her young children would not have a "nor- mal upbringing," living in the president's large white house on South University Avenue. "I was not happy about it because my chil- dren (Bob and Anne Linda) were only 7 and 5," Hatcher said. "It kind of spoiled my vision of how I was going to bring them up. So I was not happy about it, but since he felt it was the thing he wanted to do I had to support him, and I went along in the traditional view of the wife of the president." Anne Duderstadt also said she was initially skeptical about her husband's promotion to University president in 1988. "I didn't want Jim to take the Michigan presi- dency in the first place when the regents offered it to him because of the stress I believed it would put on our family," Anne Duderstadt said. "But eventually we decided together that we simply arranged to meet with students in the house. She was just terrific." Fleming took: on the the role of first lady during the tumultuous politics of the The Hatcher family late 1960s. Fleming said one of the first questions she was asked was whether she planned to continue "Mrs. Hatcher's tradition and have teas." "If that's what the students want, I guess that's what we'll do," Fleming said in a 1988 panel inter- view at the Bentley Historical Library. For a year the social climate on & campus was stable and tranquil, > HarlanI but before long, things began to ' 19 change. "During 1968, 1969, 1970, the Robben students' manner of living was 19 changing," Fleming said. "Mores were different; bare feet and blue j jeans were the order of the day." Harold The teas and formal dress were just two casualties of the new era. "Realization of the discrimina- Jms tion of the last 200 years dawned James I on campus at that time, and the stu-1-9 dents made Mr. Fleming and the other administrators feel that they B were responsible for everything L that had happened up to y' that point," Fleming said. Ho )51 1F a68 5bi another. "(Anne) was indeed my chief adviser," James Duderstadt said. "Since the presidency is a total immersion, experience that occupies most of one's waking moments, almost everything we did involved University activities of some type." Personal time Behind the looming stature of atcher each president stands a woman S1967 who creates waves of her own. Hatcher was involved with the eming > Red Cross board and hosted local women groups' meetings at her z979 home. She said the "full-time job" of maintaining the presi- hapiro dent's house was an "activity in 0-1987 itself," "I had always been very inde- pendent," Hatcher said, adding iderstadt that she was a teacher for 10 years 8-1996 before she married. "I had no feeling of being the dependent little inger wife," Hatcher 7- said. "i felt that I was somebody. I had proved myself as being someone who contributed to society." Hatcher said that after 16 years of service she was pre- pared to bid the position farewell. "In general it was a good expe- rience," Hatcher said. "I certainly would not want to have lived that kind of life for my whole life. I was relieved. I was getting very tired. I had more than enough." Fleming was an active member of the Ann Arbor community. "I thought it was important to have community-University rela- tionship," she said. "I was on the Bti da1 role as a faculty member aidas tie pres fe i4proided an uncomfortable con- flict when her department in the School of Social Work was phased out. "Everybody assumes I could have influence in that decision," Shapiro said. "We had lost our funding and some people wanted the University to grant further support and pressured me to act. I would say I am very, very careful on the subject of special influence. I feel that it is inappropriate to try to have more influence than I ought to by virtue of my faculty appointment." Anne Duderstadt dedicated her private time to renovating the president's house on 815 S. University Ave., and the Inglis House, which is frequently used to house visiting dignitaries. "Each of Michigan's first ladies has had a unique impact on the University," James Duderstadt said. "Each first lady has become an important part of. the history of the University." Over time, each first lady of the University has brought a sense of individuality and dignity to the position. "I think being here has changed my whole life," Fleming said. "It has given me a lot more self confidence, and a feeling of well being. It has been a growing experience, a widening experience. "It has just been of tremendous advantage to me throughout my years here," she said. "It has been the apex. I remember telling Charlie Overberger (former vice president for research) when we were about to leave, 'From now on it's going to be all down hill."' Fleming said her experiences in that era were a mix of good and bad. She said she admired the spirit of the students, but admit- ted to being scared after bricks were thrown through the windows of the president's house during a student protest. By 1980, when the Shapiros moved into the president's house, the student body was less volatile, and Vivian Shapiro and her husband looked for outlets where they could improve communication with students. "So many decisions the University has to make are very difficult, and some can be very complicated to explain," The Duderstadt family Sally and Robben Fleming 01 eew 44%CC a I'We By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter Her days are spent tucked away in a cozy studio in New Hampshire, painting and reading incessantly. For Jean Magnano Bollinger, a third-generation Italian and Swedish descendant, this is where she is most at ease. Bollinger, a passionate, strong-willed woman, uses paint strokes on a canvas to express what she is feeling. Her inspiration is drawn from looking at art within the context of society today. The product Tied, and attended Columbia University, where Lee obtained his law degree, and Jean received her masters in education and psychology. In 1973, Lee was offered a position to become an assistant pro- fessor at the University Law School, which brought the Bollingers to Ann Arbor. "There are so many interesting talks and exhibits being shown that it really draws you in," she added. "It's a nice diversion from life." While Lee climbed the ranks in the Law School's faculty, Jean combined her appreciation for art with her degree in education to going to take a lot of time to figure out how this all works. I think it's going to be a long evolution and I haven't come close to figur- ing it out." What Jean Bollinger is sure about, however, is her passion for the University and the students. "I love the life of Ann Arbor and the campus," Jean Bollinger said. "Compared to Hanover, it's a very different student body - there is a breadth that one senses." Her desire to wander around the campus freely and explore how students feel today is the central reason why she would like to main-