The Michigan Daily - Friday, May 8, 1987 - Page 5 Wallace upset some students by making the comment that "it never occurred to me back in college that one day l would be listening to Polish jokes, or Jewish jokes, or Italian jokes, or Black jokes, and laughing." "I am now even more convinced than before that the man is a bigot," said Carlton Jackson, a graduating senior, "He would have done better to just have not addressed (racism) at all." During Wallace's speech some graduates turned their backs to him in protest. After Wallace's address, the majority of graduates gave him a standing ovation in support of his message. "Everybody makes mistakes," said one graduate who refused to be named. "It is time that all the protesting on this campus stopped." Although some graduates had mixed reactions to Wallace's speech, others did not get in the ceremony in time to hear his comments. Many were caught in the slow moving crowd of people trying to enter the stadium through the only gate opened. Most of the graduates were angry that the ceremony started even though many were still trying to get to their seats. "At least they could have waited," said Judy Johnston, LSA graduate said. "Who is the ceremony for any way?" Concern over possibly disruptive actions from Wallace protesters prompted the ceremony planners to admit both graduates and guests through only one gate. A group of graduates stand and turn their backs on Mike Wallace to protest racist jokes he made six years ago. New graduates celebrate the special moment.