292:. Shortly after the shooting, Columbia University administration members stated that new security measures would be implemented in the wake of the shooting, but that the goal would be to maintain a relaxed atmosphere on campus. When classes resumed in September, Coleman was back at his desk with his right arm still in a cast, after having been in the hospital for ten days for a lung punctured by a bullet and then spending two weeks recuperating at home before he returned to his duties on a part-time schedule.
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The university hired him in 1948 to operate a scholarship program, and through 1972 he administered all financial aid programs at the school as assistant to the dean. During this period, Coleman was coach of the varsity lightweight crew. After a break for military service, he was named assistant dean
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When the student protests erupted on the
Columbia campus in April 1968, he was serving as acting dean of Columbia College, having been named to the post the previous year. Though he was much liked – a contemporaneous student description stated that he was "a much better dean than anybody expected" –
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Though he was not in his office when the takeover was initiated, he made his way into the building past protesters, went into his office and stated that "I have no control over the demands you are making, but I have no intention of meeting any demand under a situation such as this." He was detained
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On July 25, 1972, Coleman was hit by several bullets fired by
Eldridge McKinney, a student who had been asked to withdraw from school due to poor grades and who was described as "livid" when he entered the Columbia administration building and advanced to Dean Coleman's office. Coleman was taken to
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He served as dean of students until his retirement in 1979. He was honored in 1996 with the college's John Jay Award for distinguished professional achievement, which recognized his status as a war veteran who "calmly refused to be bullied or coerced, and retained the respect of hawks and doves
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and later wrote letters of recommendation to law school for some of the students involved in the protests. In 1972, he was shot five times by a disgruntled student who had been asked to withdraw from the university due to poor grades.
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announced that
Coleman would be their hostage of choice and that the nearly 700 protesters occupying Hamilton Hall would remain there until their demands were met.
404:"Dean at Columbia Is Shot; Suspended Student Sought; College Official, at Work in Hamilton Hall Office, Struck by 3 Bullets Columbia Dean Is Shot in Hamilton Hall"
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describing his departure from the siege as "showing no sign that he had been unsettled by the experience". The initial wave of protests ended a week later when
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in his office as furniture was placed to keep him from leaving. He had been provided with food while being held and was able to leave 24 hours later, with
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in 1958. He was named director of admissions in 1960, where he initiated a process to increase diversity on campus, deemphasizing the role of
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After his retirement, he began a guidance firm for college-bound high school students and administered various scholarship programs.
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educational administrator who was serving as acting dean of
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Columbia School of
Engineering and Applied Science alumni
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alike" in his actions during the 1968 student protests.
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when he was held hostage in an office for a day by the
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in
February 1946 with a bachelor of science degree in
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207:. While an undergraduate, he was captain of the
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380:"Henry S. Coleman '46, Former Interim Dean"
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