Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 29, 1990 SPEAKERS Continued from page 1 selection from the top three candi- dates, said Judith Goodman, assistant dean for admissions and student ser- vices at the Business School. In place of a guest speaker, the College of Architecture and Urban Planning will hear three of the col- lege's students, said Andrew Noble, an architecture and urban planning senior on the college's commence- ment committee. "They (guest speakers) tend to run too long, and we have to get out ly 2:30," he said. - "Last year they had a speaker, and he didn't really have much rele- vance," said Heather Taylor, an ar- chitecture senior and co-coordinator of the student slide show for the cer- emony. Though Noble said he approved of having student speakers, he was disappointed the college did not have a guest speaker. 3RD WARD Continued from page 1 should be done by the city and also supports the implementation of a comprehensive recycling program. She criticized current council Repub- licans for "foot-dragging" on the im- plementing such policies. Voters should ask themselves, "Is Ann Arbor being run in the public interest or is it being run in the spe- cial interests?" Brater said. In order to ease rising property taxes the city should work through the state government in Lansing, Brater said. She added that she was skeptical about implementing a city income tax that would cost a million dollars to administer. Copi suggested the city should rise parking fees and parking fines to raise revenue for the city in order At the Residential College, all 119 graduates and RC director Herb Eagle will speak in lieu of a guest, said Sheila Wilder, Eagle's assistant. Information and Library Studies graduates, instead of attending their 'The first person we asked had a heart attack and a stroke, the second person had a gall bladder removed' - Marjorie Levy Art School dean own separate ceremony, will join Rackham graduates in the Clements library. Commencement speakers for the School of Art, Law School, School of Social Work, and the Graduate School have not been confirmed. "The first person we asked had a heart attack and a stroke, the second person had a gall bladder removed. It will be someone with a Michigan connection and an art connection and has a close relationship to the (art) family," said Marjorie Levy, Art School dean. Thenfollowing speakers have been confirmed for the listed schools: Architecture&Urban Planning: student speakers. Business Administration: Frank Poposs, president of the Dow Chemical Company. UDentistry: June Osborn, dean of the University's School of Public Health. H Education: Deborah Meier, principal of Central Park East Secondary School in New York City. Engineering: University President James Duderstadt. ELSA: Lawrence Kasdan, film director. Medicine: Louis Sullivan, Secretary of the Dept. of Health & Human Services. Medicine honors ceremony: Francis Collins,University assosi- cate professor of internal medicine. EMusic: Dean Bolas, President, Interlochen Center for the Arts. I Natural Resources: James Crowfoot, dean, School of Natural Resources. U Steven Yaffee, professor, School of Natural Resources. Nursing: Sue Hegyvary, dean of Nursing at School at Washington. Pharmacy: Henri Manasse, dean, College of Pharmacy at University of Illinois-Chicago. Physical Education: Bo Schembechler, former Michigan football coach and athletic director. Public Health: Myron Allukian,asst. deputy commissioner, Dept. of Health Hospitals at Boston. All ceremonies will be held be- tween May 4 and June 1. to shift the burden from the taxpay- ers. He said the issue of spiraling property taxes was the story of the elections. "(Residents) are up in arms," Copi said. "We need to find more ways to raise money without raising taxes.", LIBEL Continued from Page 1 Rielly and Sciarotta, LSA repre- sentatives and members of the Con- servative Coalition, have been col- lecting student signatures and con- tacting administration officials for several weeks, in an effort to reform the University's meal credit policies. "Corey can do all he wants, but it's a joke," said Rielly. "We're out there working, and obviously the Action Party wants to squelch it be- cause they know that we're doing the things that are good." Nuts and Bolts VEEJ? YES? AREYOU S&L Au gEc TO DOG? O.K. r / , v, A Bit of wVm I UTIC44 CON1OICv! NA A*, ftR M ANqw c - } FRIEND TOOL CA5T o-- v 'y U Cr AMA T r f lr E NCB MHL7E F1 LL OVER, N TAN SID ~*E JV( J Calvin and Hobbes by Judd Winick ED {