THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 14, 1974 Graduation: A new start fo Walking up and down the serpentine lines outside of Crisler Arena on Graduation Day, one was struck by more than the awesome size of the University's student body. After all, what has plagued every undergraduate for four years would not magically disappear at the end. More surprisingly, b u r i e d underneath the judicious black robes, rented for a few hours from Moe's Sports Shop or Tice's, were many formerly-blue-jeaned and tee-shirted friends, those with whom one had joined to rail against tradition and to major in iconoclasm. All of us were supposed to have told our parents not to come, because we weren't bothering to attend ourselves; and there we stood, all-too typically, ending our college careers waiting in line. One protestor, standing atop the tunnel en- trance to the arena, repeatedly taunted the participants for attending the ceremony, not for themselves but for their parents. But with the costs of education what they are, who was to begrudge them this bit of satisfaction? Many, however, attended for more personal reasons as well. For graduation, the ceremony and the event, represents hundreds of individual water- sheds, the caps and gowns flowering of a four-year fa1 With the job situation bleak thing else more ominous tl tremely easy to jettison colle celebrate with the old folks had vowed to avoid. Besides, to be highlighted by another President of the United State For anyone still not suit prospect of the "real" woriq Jerry Ford's visit to Ann N jolted him into harsh recog as a homecoming of sorts, ,was only one brief stopover tour around the country, as tinuing series of White Houst apologists. His speech, a lat graduates of the countless ho in chemistry lectures, cony well-chosen and often-retread Watergate; and while close any revelations, revealed n noteworthy was the context5 tered; for the Vice-Presidea