The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 6, 1981-Page 17 Shapiro addresses graduates (Continueatrom rage 10) ceremony. "traditional values in our society and tion of the audience. to a universal concern for human life Shapiro said the graduates of the an alternative set of so-called 'life Along with Shapiro, Paula Petkoff, a makes our accomplishments in modern 1930s and 1940s had to face the Great styles.' " nursing senior and James B. Angell medicine ..: pale by comparison," he Depression and its aftermath and the "This recent generation of graduates Scholar, congratulated the graduates. said. graduating students of the immediate rejected their past in a kind of collec- Unlike commencement ceremonies Apart from the lack of a major guest post-World War II decades faced the tive oedipal revolt," he said, remarking in recent years, Saturday's ceremony speakerat Saturday's ceremony, the problem of "healing the material and that despite the accomplishments of the lacked a major guest speaker, although traditional style. The new alumnae human wounds" of the war, movement which rejected the authority organizers of the event estimated that traditional sstylerd T he aluma In recent decades, he continued, of tradition, "much of the enormous attendance was greater this year. could he seen scattered shout the cam- the "generation of your parents and energy spent in these efforts Guest speakers in the last few years pus Saturday morning in cap and gown perhaps your brothers and sisters" has degenerated into a paralysis of nar- have included former Vice-president posing on doorsteps and library steps confronted the Vietnam War and its cissistic sensibility, a feeling of im- Walter Mondale and former am- a select pe. Bu efore dertin' implications. Shapiro added that potence, and a withdrawal into concern bassador to the United Nations Don a te the 6,100 degree can- graduates of the late 60s and early 70s with the self." This remark was met by .McHenry. didates-the Ph.D. recipients-shook had to meet the confrontation between scattered hisses from the student sec- hands with Shapiro during the formal -___scattered_______hisses______from ____the ____student______se___- Official contract ratification predicted (Continued from Page 1) decision making has been definitely improved. Assistant Hospital Personnel Direc- tor John Forsyth believes that since the Nurse Council has unanimously en- dorsed the contract it will be "over- whelmingly ratified" by the individual nurses. In the meantime, everyone is working hard to get the hospital running smoothly again, Forsyth said. He spoke to several head nurses and said since the nurses began returing to the job the "environment has been good." HE DENIED THERE will be any ill effects shown toward the nurses who walked out and hopes people will let "bygones be bygones." According to hospital estimates about half of the University nurses par- ticipated in the walkout. Nurses have said this creates a potential problem between the nurses who walked out and those who refused to strike. According to one nurse who wished to remain nameless, "it was like hell crossing those picket lines," but now, she said, everything is back to normal between the nurses "as long as you don't begin to discuss the strike." University Hospital spokesman Joseph Owsley said things "are rapidly approaching normal status" at the hospital. They have begun to reschedule admissions on a normal basis. The nurses have been working without a contract since last September when their previous agreement ex- pired. The tentative contract reached last week is backdated to October 1, 1980 and runs 36 months. AGREEMENT BETWEEN the two sides came after more than 15 hours of bargaining last Thursday and after more than 50 bargaining sessions since last September. The walkout by the nurses was the first in the Hospital's 112-year history. Forsyth also announced that a ten- tative agreement has been reached between the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Em- ployees (AFSCME) and the University. There are 2,100 University employees in AFSCME, 900 of whom work at the Hospital, said Forsyth. Their contract is expected to be ratified this Friday. The continuing saga of The Unforgett5BuIs" I W : -Hanni-Bul Hanni-Bull took the Bull by the horns and led an army of elephants across the Alps. But once he got there he took his Bull by the keg. Because anyone who's ever tried to lead an army of elephants anywhere knows Hanni-Bull worked up a historic thirst. The kind it took a bunch of Bull to conquer. No one does it like the Bull. m 1981 JosSchit Brewing compc ry Milwatke i isconsin