THE MICHIGAN DAILY Smith Discusses Morality, Self-Criticism w By KATHERINE MANNING Considering the moral act with- out regard-to the agent causes the individual to lose his own integri- ty and capacity for self-criticism, , Prof. John E. Smith of Yale Uni- versity and chairman of the phil- osophy department said. "We cannot get along with both the agent and the act," he ex- plained in a lecture sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs. The agent is the locus of a moral situ- ation, and an act without regard to the agent cannot be criticized. It -becomes impersonal and in the end the agent doesn't have the re- sponsibility. SNGCPlays By MARGARET LOWE "It is not clear which way the Mississippi voter registration will go," Robert Moses said on a tape played last night at the final spring meeting of the University "Friendsof the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Moses, head of the Mississippi voter registration drive, noted that it is still too early to determine whether Mississippi Delta Negroes will register en masse or in small groups. Speaking on the recent tension in Greenwood, Miss., he attempt- ed to answer many current ques- tions concerning - this troubled area. 'Black and Poor' "People who have been going down to register are primarily those who are-very black- and very poor," he explained. So far only about 600 out of 13,000 potential voters have registered.y However, Negro illiteracy still remains a problem. Registrants must be able to read, write and interpret parts of the Mississippi constitution. Moses does not consider this a major problem to Negro voting, because Negroes know current lo- cal officers and probably "their papas and mamas" too. They are "not voting in a vacuum" and can make intelligent decisions by asking others at the polls to read the ballot to them. Greenwood Jailings In discussing the recent jailings in Greenwood, Moses said the marchers "did not anticipate that police would react as they did." e thinks the police made the wrong move and did not give marchers a chance to explain. The police "sim- ply went beserk," Moses said. One degree of freedom that has been gained is the relaxing of tension in places of registration. The courthouse in Greenwood now provides classes in how to reg- ister. APO Initiates Book Collection Alpha Phi Omega, the Univer- sity's s e r v i c e fraternity, has launched a book-collecting drive in the campus community to promote educational aims in underdevelop- ed African nations. Books of all kinds will be ac- cepted. Paperbacks, classics, and old texts are especially needed. The condition of the books is not important, but a great many are needed. Collecting boxes are located in every department's main office and in central gathering points on campus. Prof. Smith :stressed the neces- sity of bringing these two features of morality, the agent and the act, together. "The agent is sometimes spirited away in the process of dis- cussion," he said. Complex Set In discussing a moral situation, the individual to whom an act be- longs is frequently replaced by the complex set of conditions which surrounded the act or per- haps even by the act itself, he stated. However, the agent is the per- son to whom the act belongs and must not be dissolved away. "The individual himself must be aware of the moral impact of what he' does and must understand his re- sponsibility." He must strive to compare his performance with an ideal one, Prof. Smith noted. j Prof. Smith discussed three theories concerning morality. The Judaeo-Christian approach stress- es the moral agent and his motive at the instant, but tends to cut the agent off, thinking more in terms of character, he said. A second method merely cata- gorizes acts taken by themselves. "Morality based upon acts can- not be subject to criticism, be- cause the acts cannot be traced to the agent. Since there is no way of introducing criticism, the theo- ry becomes dogmatic and there is no room. for discussion," Prof. Smith said. Tributory Effect Taking an act as having a ten- dency or tributory effect is the third approach Prof. Smith noted. This approach does not consider just the act or the agent, but the tendency of the act to promote a goal or impede its realization, he added. v A.cross4 X. J. Kennedy will read and sing his own poems in a program sponsored jointly by the John Barton Wolgamot Society and the Wesley Foundation at 8:30 p.m. today in the Wesley Foundation lounge. Handlin... Prof. Oscar Handlin of Harvard University will deliver his second speech to the Michigan School- masters' Club. He will discuss "The Excellent and the Others in Demo- cratic Education" at 9:15 a.m. to- day in Rackham Lecture Hall. Archaeology... F. A. Khan, director of archae- ology for the: Pakistan government will speak at 4:00 p.m. today in the Multi-purpose Room of the UGLI on "The Harappa and Hohenjo- daro Culture." Recital . . Soprano Sandra. .Stouffer will present a recital at 830 p.m. to- morrow in Lane Hall Aud. She will be accompanied on the piano by Constance Speake and on the3 clarinet by Jack Colangeio. Astronomy... Prof. Donat G. Wentzell of the astronomy department will speak on "The Tucson Meeting of the American Astronomical Society" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Observa- tory. Managers.. . Prof. Edwin E. Ghiselli of the University of California will speak on "Managerial Talent" at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. A. Prof. Ghi- JOHN E. SMITH ... discusses morality When talking about a moral sit- uation, several different aspects must be focused upon, he said: the moral agent, the circumstances that surround the action, the act itself, the consequences, and the standard.' "My own feeling is that there is a wide spread failure to under- stand what the meaning of moral- ity is," Prof. Smith stated. The choice of alternatives so that one is better than others is too broad and generous. We must try, he added, to de- termine specifically what situa- tions can be identified as moral. "One of the things to do is to look clearly at the concrete aspects of theories as they do arise," he con- tinued, "and look at situations in which we find ourselves acting as moral beings." Cam s selli was selected as Walter V. Bingham Memorial Lecturer this year by the American Psychologi- cal Association, and the Univer- sity was selected as the location for the lecture. Song Festival Tours State The University's radio classroom program, "Festival of Song," be- gan its 13th annual tour of the state Tuesday. The program is being presented in 11 Michigan cities to audiences of children accustomed to listen- ing to the twice-a-week "Festival" programs. Featured in the local shows will be Prof. Frances Gillet of the mu- sic school, Orien Dalley of radio station WUOM and a quartet of University music students. The programs are presented "live" by University stations, WUOM, Ann Arbor, and WVGR, 3Grand Rapids. In addition, tape recordings of the programs are played by 25 other stations throughout the state. The local "Festivals" will con- sist of songs and special musical activities which the children have learned through the broadcasts. "Festival" has become part of the curriculum in hundreds of schools by helping to serve the musical education needs of more than 80,000 children. AEA Head' Recognizes Wage Scale' By MICHAEL HYMAN Speaking on "International; Trade and Finance" at the School of Business Administration, Prof. Gottfried Haberler of Harvard University suggested frozen wage levels as the best solution for the current balance of payment and internal slack problems. Prof. Haberler, who is president of the American Economic Asso- ciation, said that stable wages with rising productivity would low- er prices, encourage consumption and, consequently, e c o n o m i c growth. Stable wages would also reduce American consumption abroad and discourage the European tenden- cy to withdraw gold from Ameri- can banks. Frozen Wages However, Prof. Haberler noted the virtual impossibility of volun- tarily getting unions to freeze wages, and the excessive controls which would be needed to effect a compulsory policy. Another solution to the problem is European inflation which would improve the United States' finan- cial position all around. The self- defeating nature of this solution is self-evident. Depreciating the dollar is a pos- sible solution, Prof. Haberler said. However, the government has al- ready said the dollar would never be depreciated. Such a deprecia- tion might cause panic which would erase any beneficial effects. Also, depreciation is mainly a stop- gap measure, not a financial solu- tion. Foreign Aid There are two other policies the government might take. The restrictive one would place strict control on foreign aid, American spending abroad and American investment abroad. Re- ducing tourist allowances, for ex- ample, might be the first step. Such an answer to the balance of payments question would require strict control in an unprecedented form. The other approach to the bal- ance of payments problem is also self defeating. Internal slack (dis- use of industrial and manpower potential) might be allowed to in- crease, while high interest rates destroy the deficit in balance of payments. Some Deficit Prof. Haberler noted that the deficit in balance of payments last year was contrived to appear some- what less than it was, and this year the deficit will be much the same. The Trade Expansion Act (1962) was "the American response to the challenge of the Common Mar- ket," he said. "However, it had so much fine print attached to it that its value as a tariff lowering instrument was impaired. Prof. Haberler, a free trade ad- vocate, said that the Common Market may eventually hurt Unit- ed States exports in agriculture to the extent of $.5 billion a year. Although the Market is institut- ing tariff-free areas inside Eu- rope, it discriminates externally and thus does nothing to further economic internationalism. However, Prof. Haberler, a grad- uate of the London School of Eco- nomics, minimized the actual suc- cess of the Common Market. The Regents accepted $569,000 in gifts, grants and bequests at their regular meeting Friday. The largest single gift was $300,- 400 from the estate of J. Mac- Intyre Jaycox, '87, to establish the J. MacIntyre Jaycox Estate Fund. The next largest gift was $59,000 for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Domestic Graduate Fellowship Fund. From Educational Services, Inc. of Watertown, Mass., came $23,000 for the Educational Services, Inc., AID India Fund. Auto Gift The Automobile Manufacturers Association, Inc. of Detroit pre- sented $21,500 for the Automobile Manufacturers Association Re- search Fund. The American Medical Associa- tion Education Research Founda- tion of Chicago gave $21,000 for the American Medical Association Education Research Foundation Fund. The Ford Motor Company Fund of Dearborn gave a total of $19,750 for two projects: $15,000 for the Ford Motor Company Fund- Driving Behavior Fund and $4,750 for the Catherine Smith Brown Memorial Fund. Wayne State University of De- troit presented $18,750 as the third quarter allocation for the joint Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations. Sloan Donation The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation of New York City gave $15,000 for two projects: $8050 for the Sloan Foundation Fundamental Research-Chemistry Fund, and $7000 for the Sloan Foundation Fundamental Research - Astro- physics Fund. From miscellaneous donors came $9,285 for the Cyrus C. Eturgis Hematology Library Fund. The Drusilla Farwell Foundation of Detroit gave $7500 for the Dru- silla Farwell Intern - Resident- Physician Trainee Fund. The Ford Motor Company of Dearborn presented $5000 to es- tablish the Ford Motor Company Engineering Research Fund. Merck Gifts Two other $5000 gifts were from the Merck & Co., Inc of Rahway, N.J., for the Circulation Research Fund, and from the es- tate of Dr. Lawrence Reynolds for the Clements Library Special Fund. From an anonymous donor came $4,752 for the Neurosurgical Resi- dents' Fund. From the Upjohn Co. of Kala- mazoo came $4,750 for three pro- jects: $3000 for the Upjohn Com- pany Bacteriology Research Fund, $1000 for the Harry Helfman Pem- phigus Research Fund and $750 for the Upjohn Company Neurology Research Fund. Eli Lilly and Co. of Indianapolis APRIL 28 GILBERT & SULLIVAN present TOLEDO WAR and COX & BOX Tickets only 75c at SAB Wed. - Fri. at Lydia Sunday 8:00 Curtain $569,000: Regents Accept Gifts, Grants, Bequests presented $4500 for the Eli Lilly. Fellowship for Study of Virus Diseases. The Research Lab Division of the Bendix Corp. of Detroit gave $4000 to establish the Bendix Corporation-Therminonic Plasmas Fund. Engineering Fellowship Another $4000 came from the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison, Ka. for the Muchnic Foundation Fellowship in Chemical and Metal- lurgical Engineering. A total of $3,864 came from the Ellis L. Phillips Foundation of New York City for the Ellis L. Phillips Foundation of New York Fund. From the National Merit Schol- arship Corp. of Evanston came $3,150 for the National Merit Scholarships. Stauffer Gift The Stauffer Chemical Co. of New York City presented $3000 for the Stauffer Chemical Company Graduate Fellowships. There were two $2000 gifts. One came from the American Conser- vation Association Research Fund, and the other from Packard Re- search Foundation of La Grange, Ill., to establish the Packard Re- search Foundation Fund. From the Associated General Contractors of America, Inc., Michigan Division of Lansing came $1800 to establish a fellow- ship in civil engineering. Surgical Research The Parke, Davis & Co. of De- troit gave $1500 for the Parke, Davis & Co. Surgical Research Fund. From miscellaneous donors came $1,251 to establish the Francis B. Vedder Student Loan Fund for dental students and hygienists. The Alcoa Foundation of Pitts- burgh gave $1,250 for two projects: $650 each for the Alcoa Electrical Engineering and Metallurgical En- gineering Scholarships. Five Gifts Five sources each gave $1000. They were: The Chemstrand Co. of New York City: $500 each for the Chemstrand Scholarship and for the Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering Special Fund. Miller To Talk At Ceremony The guest lecturer at the annual Hopwood Awards ceremony Thurs- day, May 23, will be playwright Arthur Miller. Figures show that this year 78 students submitted 95 manuscripts for the competition. If USE' OUR,, BOX-STORAGE Don't ship or take your winter garments home. En- trust them to us for safe keeping this summer. Upon your return in the fall they'll be ready for you. For details stop in or call gold bond cleaners 515 E. William NO 8-6335 NO 8-7017 IT _1 GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE? TONIGHT and SATURDAY U-M Players present Jean Giradoux's The Madwoman 11 I "A MAGICAL MASTERPIECE." -LOOK Magazine "SINGS OUT FOR THIS YEAR'S OSCAR." I of Chaillot with Prof. Claribel Baird 11 11 I i II the Lincolun Center Repertory 7 heare. - .. - / I MiliMMMMMMMMMM