THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, CIC CONFERENCE: Trade Ideas About Minorities Regents Accept Bequests, Gifts at Monthly Meeting SORCERER'S APPR ENTIC3: Mumford Discusses Science By BARBARA SEYFRIED The relationship of discrimi- nation to university housing, so- cial organizations, employment, admissions and scholarships was the topic of discussions at the Conference on Human Rights of the Committee on Institutional Co- operation held recently in Madi- son, Wis. "The conference was mainly an opportunity to exchange ideas and to see how different schools are dealing with discrimination prob- lems," John F6ldkamp, '65L, as- sistant to the director of student' activities and organizations, com- mented. Feldkamp and Barry Bluestone, '66, were the University delegates1 to the conference. Variance "There is a wide variance amonga the schools represented," Feld-' kamp continued. "Some are pri- vate, some state supported and each is working out, the problems in a different way. In the area of social organizations, at the Uni- versity of Minnesota it is the administration that is working on the discrimination problem. At the University of Wisconsin, it is the faculty. Here at the Uni- versity, it's the students. "Each delegation was allowed 20 minutes at the conference to explain what its school is do- ing to attract more Negroes to its campus," Bluestone said. "We ex- plained what Leonard Sai, special assistant to the director of ad- missions, was doing in his work with Negroes, a!Sd- we explained the University-Tuskegee mutual- assistance plan. "We spent ,most of the time discussing discriminatory clauses in national charters and discrim- inatory practices of campus social organizations," Bluestone added. Recommendation One result of the conference was a recommendation to the CIC that it contact member schools- the Big Ten plus the University of Chicago-and urge them to in- form social organizations on their ;ampuses that they will not per- mit organizations to remain af- filiated with it if they have dis- BARRY BLUESTONE JOHN C. FELDKAMP criminatory clauses in their char- ters or practice discrimination. "Most universities, however, are already moving to the point where they won't allow student orga- nizations to remain affiliated with the school if they are discrimin- ating in the areas of race, na- tional origin and religion," Blue- stone added. "We- found that all the univer- sities represented at the confer- ence had admission policies re- quiring neither that a picture be sent with the application nor that race be indicated on the blank," Bluestone 'said, Major Problem "One major problem pointed out was that of getting more Negroes to apply. There is an extremely small, number of Negroes in the student body at each university represented at the conference. The number of Negroes at the Univer- sity is about 200 or less. "Many Negroes don't attend the CIC universities because they aren't aware of their opportunity to attend. Many go elsewhere ,be- cause they feel the social-psy- chological environment at a pre- dominantly white school is too much to contend with," Bluestone added. "To help solve this problem," Feldkamp said,' "the University is trying to recruit people from un- derdeveloped areas and has es- tablished a summer institute where students from areas that aren't college motivated can come on- to campus and see what college is like. The University is also setting up financial programs to aid those interested in coming' here." "In the talks on housing, Mr. Feldkamp and myself mentioned the latest Student Government Council action and past actions taken by the Office of Student Affairs and Housing Bureau to halt discrimination," Bluestone said. - "The latest SGC proposal is to add health, safety and sanitation tequirements to the University approved off-campus. housing con- tracts. This would make it more difficult for any landlord to lease substandard housing. Often mem- bers of minority groups--foreign students as well as Negroes-live in this type of housing. This is an attempt to raise the living conditions," Bluestone explained. "The University has provided a4 positive incentive to landlords to meet University housing require- ments. It has tried to make it easy for those who comply with Uni- versity regulations to get ten- ants," he said. "The OSA has not started blacklisting landlords who don't comply with University reg- ulations, like the University of Minnesota, but it could consider such an action. "We found that it is hard for any university to discriminate in its hiring of student help mainly because there are so few Negroes attending the universities. Of course this doesn't necessarily pre- sent a true picture. For example, there is no centralized hiring'agen- cy here at the University, and therefore most 'of the departments do their own hiring. The Uni- versity administration can rarely know of departmental discrimina- tion if it is going on, or even if it is going on at all," Bluestone' continued. "For non-student help the Uni- versity has in the past recruited from predominantly white areas. At the present time, it is making attempts to go into non-white areas to get help. "Many universities represented at the conference, we found, were working to set aside some funds for Negro scholarships. There seems to be a trend toward set- ting up special programs, in oth, er areas as well as scholarships, to bring more Negroes to the uni- versities." Discriminatory Clauses "The University hasn't accepted any scholarships with discrimin- atory clauses in them since 1947," Bluestone claimed. "Our feeling on scholarships, which could be termed discrimina- tory," Feldkamp said, "is that al- though some of them are restrict- ed to just Negroes and some to just whites, there are enough scholarships without any restric- tions in them to enable the Uni- versity to give financial assist- ance on a non-discriminatory bas- is." "We want to eliminate any chance of discrimination," Blue- stone declared, "and I feel the next step is to work on de facto discrimination which can't be legislated out of existence. It is the type that lies in a person's at- titude." 'The Regents accepted the fol- lowing gifts at their April meet- ing: The estate of Roy S. Campbell, filed for probate in Bath Coun- ty, Virginia, provides an estimat- ed $169,000 through the Alumni Fund "for any purpose it (the University) deems proper." Camp- bell was a 1912 engineering grad- uate and was given an honoraryl doctor of engineering degree in 1949. The estate of Emma 'Louise Knott, filed for probate in King County, Wash., provides $5000 for the operation of the chemistry de- partment "in memory of my broth-. er, Albert Jacobson." He received. an AB in 1903 and was chief chem- ist to. the city of Seattle for many years. The estate of Sarah A. Stew- art, filed for probate in Butler County, Ohio, provides approxi- mately $25,000 "in honor of my late son, Harry H. Despond" to conduct research in diseases of the heart' and circulatory system. Despond received an AB in 1917 and an LLB in 1921 from the Uni- versity. Funds to establish the W. S. Woytinsky Lectureship Award in economics were among. $133,000. in gifts, grants and bequests ac-. cepted by the Regents. Common stock wOrth $19,142 Was given by Mrs. W. S. Woytihsky of Washington, D.C.. in memory of her husband,.a world-famous econ- omist, who died in 1960. The $1000 award will be confer- red biennially for "the best book, article or speech in the broad field of economics to educate pub- lic opifion or influence economic or social policy." Other gifts included $21,562 from the Automobile Manufactur- ers AssociatiOn," Inc., Detroit, for the Association's Research Fund. Wayne State University provided $1,750 for the' third quarter al- location for the Institute of La- bor and Industrial Relations. The, Carnegie Corporation of New York gave $12,000 for an experimental program of leader- ship traintg for vocational edu- cation unde Prof. Ralph C. Wen- rich of the eucation school.: From' the McPherson Commu- nity Health Center, Inc., Howell, came $10,800 for their Fund. The E. I. duPont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Del., pro- vided $10,000 for their Grant-in- Aid Interior Ballistics Fund un- der the direction of Prof. Lloyd E. Brownell of the chemistry and engineering departments. From the Inter-Industry High- way Safety Foundation of Michi- gan, Ann Arbor, ;came $98001 to provide scholarships for leader- ship training for teachers of driv- er education, under the, direction of Prof. Almando A. -Ve.zani of the' education school. The Michigan Heart Association provided $7,225 for the Associa- tion's Dean's Fund. The National Foundation gave $6000; $5000 from the New York office and $1000 from the Wayne County Chapter to establish the Dr. J. M. Bandera Fund. The Sam S. Shubert Founda- tion, New York, provided $2,750 to establish the Foundation's Fel- lowship "to be awarded to a graduate student interested in writing a full length play." Mrs. Stuart S. Wall of Toledo gave $2500 for the Clements Li- brary Associates Fund in mem- ory of her late husband. The State of Michigan provided $2300 to establish the Institute of Science and Technology Indus- trial Development Research As- sistance Fund. A total of $2,036 came from the Ferndale-Pleasant Ridge Universi- ty of Michigan Club and an an- onymous donor to establish the Club Scholarship.-, The University's Class of 1964 gave $2000 for the construction and installation of an information center. "The final design of the center will be selected in whole or part from the designs submit- ted by Prof. Aarre Lahti's design class, by the 'University's archi- tects and campusp lanners." From George A. Schemm of De- troit camne $2000 through the Michigan AlumniFundto estab lish the Bin-Dicator Company Scholarship. - Stewart R. Mott of Ann Arbor gave $1100 for the Berlin Uni- versity-Hamburg University Schol- arship. The Flint Civitan Auxiliary, Flint, gave $1000 for the Auxil- iary's Student Loan Fund. 'U' Fellowship Standing Falls The University fell from a fifth place to nineteenth place nation- ally this year in its number of Woodrow Wilson National Fellow- ship winners. Leading the list of undergrad uate institutions producing win- ners in 1964-65 was Harvard Uni-. versity with 55. Cornell Univer- sity and Oberlin College follow- ed with 29 and 24. California, Co- lumbia, Toronto and Chicago are all tied for fourth with 23 fel- lowship recipients. Each fellowship provides an $1,- 800 stipend, plus tuition and fees at the graduate school of the re- cipient's choice. Tied for fifth place in the num- ber of Woodrow Wilson Naional Fellowships awarded for 1964-65 a r e Stratford, Princeton a n d By THOMAS DeVRIES Collegiate Press Service CHICAGO-In a broad attack on a world of science gone mad, author Lewis Mumford called Sunday for "deliberately control- ling and correcting the automa- tion of knowledge by addressing education to larger and central human purposes." Recalling the story of the Sor- cerer's Apprentice, Mumford said that our civilization has "cleverly found a magic formula for put- ting the academic broom and pails of water to work by them- selves." But like the apprentice, we have lost the formula to stop the process, he 'asserted. Even in a field as limited as the study of diseases of the gas- tro-intestinal tract of elderly earthworms, he said, "it is diffi- cult for a conscientious scholar to keep his head above water. Seeks To Challenge "My purpose," he told the con- vention of the Association of Higher Education," is to chal- lenge as scientifically outdated as well as humanly inadequate the whole constellation of mechanical ideas that now dominate our civ- ilization beginning with the auto- mation of knowledge.' He told the 1600 educators as- sembled for the meeting that higher education has focused al- most exclusively on the produc- tion of mass scientific truths and that it is "utterlyincapableof dealing with the most pressing problem of our age: the larger system ofautomation of which it is a part." As our institutions continue to develop with their nuclear re- actors, IBM machines, television, machine-marked examinations, he said, the human element disap- pears. Yet the exponents of auto- mation "see no way of overcom- ing its deficiencies except by a further extension of automation." Eichmann Ideal The best name for' this auto- mation, Mumford told his aud- LEWIS MUMFORD ience, is "organized impotence," and the ideal hero of it is Adolf Eichmann, "the current function- ary, the perfect bureaucrat, proud to the end that he never/allowed a moral scruple or a human sen- timent to keep him from carrying out the orders that came from, above." Mumford laid the blame for the Of scientists he said: "Over- proud of their one-generation ac- quisitions, they point to the fact that there are now more scientists alive that an the whole history of the world before our genera- tion." They do not realize, he con- tinued, that the fund of knowl- edge now available is "no guar- antee whatever of our having sufficient emotional sensitiveness to make good use of it." Plenty of 'Em Mumford predicted that "with- in a couple of centuries there will be dozens of scientists for every man, woman, child and dog Qn the planet." Fortunately, he added, such conditions of over- crowding will 'nave killed off most of the population before we reach that point. "Our task today is to make the genuine good derived from the automation of knowledge subser- vient to the superior, history- laden functions and purposes of human culture," he concluded, but there is no easy way to change the present trend. paralyzing increase in knowledge and its automation to "our inabil- ity to cope with the proliferation in scientific information. k' I """""" . !' Attention: FILM-MINDED STIDENTS! INTERVIEWING FOR CINEMA GUILD BOARD POSITIONS will be TONIGHT, APRIL 28, from 7:00 P.M. in Room 3528 SAB. Sign up now for interview on door of Cinema Guild office, 2548 SAB. ' r .... Departminenzt of Spanish and La Sociedad Hispania 'Present "LA OTRA ORILLA" A Play by JOSE LOPEZ RUBIO 2:30 P.M. April 28-29 Trueblood Auditorium, Frieze Bldg. Tickets 1.00 Available at door In Spanish Swarthmore with with 20. 21. Yale follows 11 Across Campus 1 ________ 1 Ending Wednesday 4vako DIAL 8-6416 MAURICE JUDITH, EVANS ANDERSON in the GEORGE SCHAEFER producaon of WlAMSHAKESPEARES f r, " The movie "Picture in Your Mind" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3 KLMN of the Michigan Union. The movie will be. followed by a lecture and discus- sion with Singer Buchanan. The Human Relations Board and the League and Union Cultural Com- mittees are sponsoring the pre- sentation. Foreign Aid. . Prof. Hollis B. Chenery will speak on the subject "Foreign As- sistance and Economic Develop- ment" at 8 p.m. today in the fourth floor Rackham Ballroom., Prof. Chenery is a programs ad- ministrator in the Agency for In- ternational Development. Social Seminar-... Prof. Stephen B. Sweeney will speak on "Education for Public Administration" at 8 p.m. today in the- West Conference Rm. of Rackham. Prof. Sweeney is the director of Fels Institute of Local and State Government at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. This is the last program of the semester in the social seminar series sponsored by the Michigan chapter of the American Society for Public Administration. Administration . "The Nature of Business Admin- istration" will be the topic of a speech by Prof. Ray E. Brown of Duke University at 4 p.m. today in 'Rm. 141 of the Business Ad- ministration Bldg. Prof. Brown is professor of hospital administra- tion at Duke and chairman of the National Task Force on Hospital Facilities. Eight Preludes .. . Reid Nibley will give a lecture recital on the Eight Preludes by Frank Martin at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud A. Nibley is currently in the University's Doctor of Musical Arts Program under Gyorgy San- dor. 'Sunday',. . "Sunday in New York," a com- edy by Norman Krasna, opens at 8:30 p.m. today in Trueblood Aud. as the second offering in the 1964 Ann Arbor Drama Season. Ty Harden stars. >K* y ,, >. , :ANN ARBOR DRAMA S EA SON I A professional season OPENS * U of five plays since 1930 TOMORROW nwrninminarnrnwwm mimmmi nmmm riMinmwwI Television's TY HARDINI! in person in Dial 2-6264 STARTING WEDNESDAY ENDING TODAY WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS! "TOM JONES" Shows at 1:30-400 6:30 and 9:00. 1 pRESLEY $'~AI W 10P Ol4dWQ oe7AC O SUNDAY IN NEW YORK riotous sophisticated -comedy April 29-May 2 Trueblood Auditorium ' SPECIAL OFFER to introduce students to Drama Season Buy a $.25 or $3.50 ticket- bring date or friend FREE! 6' The Living Sound of GREAT FOLIMUSIC ON 20TH CENTURY-lOU RECORDS ALL THE FOLK THERE BOB CAREY -THE INTRODUCING THE IS Today's most tal- SOUL OF FOLK Bob's WELL-ROUNDED DICK ented folk artists-The thrilling style adds GLASS The record de- Greenbriar Boys, Logan "soul" and new feeling but of one of the most English, JudyRoder- to this great collection versatile new folk .t t anv nt .n , nffni cn,. artsts n lthe curresnt / BOX OFFICE OPEN in Frieze Bldg.-10 a.m. to 9 p.m. NO 3-6470 or Univ. Ext. 2235 . -__'' (a. First Show at 12:30 Shows at 12:30-2:36-4:50 6:55-9:15 \.. GREGORY TONY PECK CURTIS " . EVENINGS WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY-8:30 P.M. *TI~udets: MATIN EES THURSDAY and SATURDAY-2:30 P.M. Students: Any Show, $1.25 in balcony Eves. Orch. $4.25, 3.50, 2.50 am everv angie . fs * ml I I I