0 Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 12, 1990 Wtiz Airbiguu Bailyg EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 IssuesForum 'U' ignores the tradition of one graduation ARTS NEWS OPINION 763 0376 764 0552 747 2814 PHOTO SPORTS WEEKEND 764 0552 747 3336 747 4630 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. R /. Fro m t hesr Ia iy .i. Tenure Ruling will help fight discriminatory promotion By Daniel Quick When you heard about last year's gradu- ation commencement ceremonies, you heard one of two things. Most every senior said, "Yeah, it was great! Beach balls, friends and some beer... what more could you want!" Yet most every parent or newspaper or University official had quite the opposite view: "This debauchery and drunkenness must come to an end. Students can't even hear the commencement speech!" The University has responded by split- ting up graduation ceremonies along col- lege lines and by moving the time of the ceremony up in order to avoid partying. What we have here is a failure to communi- cate. No matter what year of school you're in, you've seen movies, heard stories and had visions about what college graduation is all about. It's standing with your best friends, throwing that cap into the air, sharing that one last relatively carefree moment before reality sneaks up on you. On a more somber note, it's a time to reflect on how far you've comeand to wonder what in the world lies ahead. And it's a great time to look like the best thing since sliced bread to your overly- proud parents. What graduation is not, however, seems to be exactly what the University pictures it as. Their decision to split the ceremony along college boundaries shows a lack of understanding about what graduation means to the students psychologically. No one really Quick is an LSA senior. cares that the president of the University stands at a podium and piles accolades upon them. How well does Jim Duderstadt really know you? No one really cares about a commence- ment speech from someone who no one has even heard of. It's not a matter of being rude or insensitive, as the University charges. It's a matter of priorities. And frankly, comrade- ship wins out over pomp and circumstance. The format of last year's ceremony was nerfect. Ten thousand hlack robes. all shar- are they assuming that all of my friends are in the same college as me? They might as well have split us up alphabetically. What's worse is that this division will fundamen- tally alter people's memories. Gone will be the remembrance of a sea of black robes filling the football stadium. Gone will be the memories of standing with your best friends if they so happen to be engineers while you're graduating in psychology. In its place will be a colder memory, a more detached emotion._ .EI~l . Va"1V VWat ~A11 VJ l"c l . .. l1 1-., u S hou.!.d : }": .9.ractuation cer mise :-:ep a ra :-:ti::}:i t ::t~~idii'~i:t" :::":by .""""": C:i::"^:.;:: :";} i :::;:4:?:";:"s:i"i:v.:0:i?