SUMMER WEEKLY 9 i4e Id an~adg One hundred and three years of editorial freedom taps its own as Law School dean By James M. Nash DAILY EDITOR IN CHIEF Just two years after becoming a full profes- sor, Jeffrey Sean Lehman is at the helm of the University's Law School, the latest step in his "storybook career." Lehman's appointment as the Law School's 14th dean hinges on approval from the University Board of Regents in May. At 37 the youngest dean of the Law School this cen- - tury, Lehman replaces cur- Lehman rent Dean Lee Bollinger. After 21 years on the Law School faculty - the last seven as dean - Bollinger is leaving in June to become provost of Dartmouth College. Bollinger's position will be difficult to fill, but the chair of the committee that recommended candidates for dean expressed confidence that Lehman will grow into his new role. "He is a very accomplished fellow - a fine scholar and one of the top graduates of the Law School," said Law Prof. Theodore St. Antoine, chair of the advisory search committee. "He is young, but he has a wonderful range of experi- ence. His is a storybook career for a young law school graduate." Several candidates, including two finalists for the position, withdrew their names from consideration. The advisory committee presented an unranked list of candidates to University Presi- dent James J. Duderstadt and Provost Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr., who have forwarded Lehman's name to the regents for approval. Lehman has already accepted the offer. Kay Dawson, Whitaker's assistant, said the administration will not disclose Lehman's sal- ary until he is officially hired as dean. Bollinger earns $172,500 to Lehman's current $90,000. Lehman works under a nine-month contract. As dean, Lehman will preside over the law school ranked No. 8 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The school has about 1,200 students and 90 faculty members. Lehman joined the Law School in 1987 as an assistant professor. He was awarded tenure in 1992. Lehman is also on the faculty of the University's Institute of Public Policy Studies, blurring the line between traditional law prac- tice and the social sciences. Lehman said he intends to make such an interdisciplinary ap- proach a hallmark of his tenure. "Over the course of the past 25 years, the Law School has moved aggressively to blend more fully into the life of the University," Lehman stated in an e-mail message from the See DEAN, Page 2 Aby Guisewite delivers the commencement addri Cathy provide By Rebecca Detken DAILY STAFF REPORTER Even though rain and 40-degree tempera- tures did not create an ideal setting for gradua- tion day, LSA graduates, their families, friends a d umbrellas filled almost half of Michigan Sdium. Despite much of the concern surrounding the choice of cartoonist Cathy Guisewite to speak at graduation, she proved to be a success- ful choice for the ceremony. Her humorous anecdotes kept a soaked audience's spirits up. Guisewite began her speech with a feminist view by focusing in on the portrayal of women and men in commercials. "Did you ever notice that in commercials the *n will be doing one thing and the women will be doing six?" she asked. Many students felt the speech's opening focus was inappropriate. "I think that the beginning of her speech Speaking to RaCkham graduates,- aDOUGLAS KNE/Daily S e k n ess at LSA graduation Saturday afternoon. Archer ecCourages vorteering e f By Patricia Montgomery same office and I see people capable of solving s co m ic relief DAILY STAFF REPORTER problems - people like yourselves, he said For many Rackham graduates and degree Archer added that Detroit is just a micro- alienated a lot of the audience," said Amy Cox, recipients, April 30 marked a day for out with cosm for the rest of the new world order. a political science graduate. "It would have the old and in with the new. Before he became mayor of Detroit, Archer been more appropriate if she had brought it into "Let the future begin," said Detroit Mayor had a varied career. her speech later." Dennis Archer, commencement speaker at Rack- He served 15 years as a trial lawyer before Ian McCulloch, a communication graduate, ham graduation exercises in Hill Auditorium. he was appointed to the Michigan Supreme said, "Some parts of her speech got to be a little Although he spoke about the future, Archer Court in 1985. Archer was the second African overly feminist, but she covered them well with said he is not sure what it will hold. American to sit on the bench in Michigan's her humor." "I do not, however, know what the future history. The rest of Guisewite's speech was better holds, but I do know that a future without a He also held leadership positions with the received as the humor became more universal. vision, whether it is the future of a city or the National Bar Association, the State Bar of Michi- Her speech focused on a variety of topics, to future of an individual's life, is no future at all," gan and the Wolverine Bar Association. which most people could relate. Archer said. At Saturday's commencement, Archer re- Guisewite said in the speech that there is a He said his vision for world success includes ceived an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. moment in everyone's life where they find their enlisting the entire world to lend a hand. Archer began his speech by borrowing two calling. During his speech Archer urged the audi- lines from Ralph Waldo Emerson. "Spartans, Recalling the turning point in her own life, ence to not just hold a paying job but to also help stoics, heroes, saints and gods give a short and she recounted the story of her final on others. positive speech," he said. "Ulysses" while at the University. She dis- Archer outlined the problems facing Detroit Regardless of his achievements and his dedi- covered her gift for creative writing when she and urged students to become a part of the cation to charitable organizations, Archer con- got an A- on the final, even though she had solution. tends he is neither a hero nor a saint. See CATHY, Page 2 "I am not afraid because I look out from the See ARCHER, Page 2