THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSAYa..PRT Slf TH MC IG N AIYT-TUfA PRT 0llt A&AU"O"tIA, ll rAAOXJU 40, LVOV v Cindermen Eye Penn Relay Wins I i PROGRAM of the By BILL PHELPS After spectacular success last weekend, the track team from Ferry Field will defend their 2- mile relay title and try to pick up gold watches in five other races this weekend at the Penn Relays. Led by infatigueable Ergas Leps, who will anchor at least three teams, the Wolverines will cer- tainly be a big factor in at least four races. The finish of the dis- tance medley event tomorrow af- ternoon should see Leps either in the lead or very close to it. The crew of Brian Gibson, Earl Deardorff, Dave Martin and Leps running a quarter-mile, half-mile,J three-quarter-mile, and mile re-1 spectively took an easy first place at Columbus last weekend. Dear- dorff, Michigan's number two or three half-miler, will yield that leg to Tony Seth, Big Ten champion at 600 yards this weekend. Seth and Leps will be joined by team captain Deardorff and last week's surprise, Frank Geist, in an attempt to defend the title now held by the Maize and Blue in the two-mile event. They will get a stiff challenge from Michi- gan State, who fell to them at the Ohio Relays and who will be out to regain the Penn Relay cham- pionship they lost last year. Leps and Deardorff, second and third in the Big Ten 880 this win- ter, and Geist, whose determined running this spring points to him as a man to watch, might even be able to back up Seth's running enough to beat MSU's 7:32.2-best time of the season. The mile relay.team of Seth, Marsh Dickerson, Dick Cephas and either Gibson or Len Cercone will face competition which Coach Don Canham considers "quite tough," Canham figures that "their suc- cess will depend a lot on who they draw as opponents in the heat." A good time there against a fast I 771---1--L team would send them into the finals ready to take on nearly anyone. The grouping of Jimn Wyman, Fred Montour, Dave Martin, and Leps in the four-mile event is an unknown quantity as it has seen no action this year. The extremely fast trio of Tom Robinson, Dick Cephas, and Ben- nie McRae will provide a constant base to which Canham will add Jeff Engel and Len Cercone for the 440 and 880 relays respec- tively in effort to come up with a winning total. SDS 1960 CO FERE CE for HUMAN RIGHTS in the NORTH April 28-May 1, 1960 Michigan Union NO 2-4431, Ext. 28 THURSDAY, APRIL 28 1 . Ii II I-M 4-7 P.M. 8:30 P.M. Open to public Rackham Lecture Hall 10:30 P.M. FRIDAY, APRIL 29 9 A.M. 10 A.M. The I-M department is accept- ing entries for the last two all- campus sports of the year, tennis (singles) and horseshoes. Play starts next Tuesday. Any- one interested should contact the I-M department this week. SCORES Alpha Kappa Lambda forfeited to Sigma Alpha Epsilon Tau Delta Phi 7, Phi Delta Theta 3 Alpha Epsilon P1 14, Theta Chi 13 Alpha Delta Phi 6, Sigma Phi Ep- silon 0 Phi Sigma Kappa 10, Tau Epsilon Phi 0 Theta Delta Chi 4, Delta Upsilon 4 Chi Psi 14, Theta Xi 13 Lambda Chi Alpha 7, Phi Epsilon Pn1n Acacia. 14, Tau Kappa Epsilon 0 Pi Lambda Phi 32, Psi Upsilon 4 Brown Leads 'M' Batters; Koch, McGinn Top Pitchers Barry Marshall, hard hitting' second baseman, has held the lead in the all important runs batted in colmn in the latest statistics released by the Michigan baseball team. Marshall, who clouted a long three-run home run to win the De- troit game on Monday, picked up two more RBI's Tuesday in the Western Michigan game to hold his slim lead -over slugging third baseman Dave Brown. Marshall has 25 while Brown, by virtue of his big day at the plate against the Bronco's padded his total to 23. However Brown still leads the team in everything else but triples. That honor goes to shortstop Gene Struczewski who has accumulated four. Brown, who is considered a fine major league prospect, has six homers, seven doubles and a lone triple among his 30 hits for an TigersLose To As 3 By The Associated Press KANSAS CITY - Ray Herbert cooled off the red hot Detroit bats last night and the Kansas City Athletics beat the American League leading Tigers 3-1. Harry Chiti, the A's erratic catcher, drove in the winning Kan- sas City runs with a single in the fourth inning off lefty Hank Aguir- re. NEW YORK - Big Jim Lemon cracked a home run with two on base to climax a -four-run eighth inning against Whitey Ford as the Washington Senators came from behind for a 5-4victory over the New York Yankees. * * . BALTIMORE -- Baltimore's rookie first baseman Jim Gentile drove in three runs in an 8-3 vic- tory over Boston. PHILADELPHIA - Vern Law scattered seven hits effectively to register his third straight pitch- ing victory without a loss as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Phila- delphia Phillies 3-2, for the Bucs' sixth win in a row. CINCUNNATI -The Milwaukee Braves, feasting on Cincinnati's ragged pitching, completed- a sweep of the two game series by beating the Reds, 8-5, in a 3 hour and 12 minutes marathon. * * * CHICAGO -- Roger Craig, mak- ing his initial start, retired the first 16 batters he faced in clamp-. ing a four-hitter on the Chicago Cubs for a 9-4 Los Angeles Dodger victory. amazing slugging percentage of .851. The pitching honors still re- main with coach Don Lund's pair of hard throwing right-handers, Al Koch and Denny McGinn. Both have run up four victories while neither has been tagged with a loss. McGinn hasput together a fine earned run average of 1.39, second only to Joe Brefeld's 0.75. AB R H HRRBI Av. Krefeld ....... 2 1 1 0 0 .50 fanovich . . 1 A eIanAn I "4LIL~ I lj .... / Brown........69 Koch........15 Franklin .....61 Marshall .. . .70 Syring.......55 Struczewski ..72 Roman.......69 Hood .........78 Merulle.......60 DeLamielleure 4 Fead._........24 Marcereau .... 6 McGinn......14 Mogk ..........9 Kucher .......10 Bradshaw .... 1 Fick. ...... I Kerr...........5 LUakonis ...... 4 Rinckey....... 3 Ziegler........ 2 TOTALS . 636 1 30 4 21 is 5 19 25 27 :10 0 1 1. S 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 163' 30 6 23 .435 6 0 1 .400 24 0 16 .393 27 2 25 .386 17 0 14 .309 22 1 12 .306 21 1 12 .304 23 0 10 .295 17 4 17 .283 0 0 1 .250 4 0 2 .166 1 0 0 .166 2 0 1 .143 1 0 2 .111 1 0 4 .100 0 0 0 .000 o 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 o 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 199 14 140 .313 COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING GALORE I !! Try our 10 Haircutters - NO WAITING The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre NO Ww is the time to STORE your WINTER GARMENTS Returned fresh and clean at the end of the season. 6:30 P.M. 2 P.M. 4-5:30 P.M. 8:30 Open P.M. to public Registration; housing arrangements (Third Floor Union) Keynote address: BAYARD RUSTIN: Special Assistant to Martin Luther King, Jr. A NEW TIDE IN THE STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM: The Negro Move- ment for Equality, South and North. Informal off campus coffee hours. Dis- cussions with leaders of the Southern student movement. Places to be announced at the Keynote address. Opening session: Introduction to the work of the conference. Allard Low- enstein, former president NSA. THE DYNAMICS OF SOCIAL ACTION AND CHANGE Three simultaneous panels: No. 1) The Politics of Change Arthur Johnson, Executive Sec'y., Detroit branch of the NAACP. John Feild, former director of the Michigan FEPC; Legislative assistant to Sen. Philip Hart, Michael Harrington, research staff, Fund for the Republic; contributor to The Reporter, Commonweal, and other publications. No. 2) . Change and Role of the Large Institution Alvin D. Loving, Assistant Professor of Education, University of Michi- gan at Flint. Herbert Hill, Labor Secretary, NAACP. No. 3) Change and the Community Structure Morris Milgram, President of Modern Community Developers Mel Ravitz, Department of Sociology, Wayne State University; Detroit City Planning Commission. Eleanor P. Wolf, Department of Sociology, the Merrill-Palmer School. WORKGROUPS (First Meeting) THE PROBLEMS: WHERE DO WE STAND? TwelvJ concurrent workgroups on particular problem areas. The focus will be on, POSSIBILITIES OF STUDENT ACTION in each of the areas consid- ered. Students will stay in the same workgroup throughout the conference. Each group will have a professional resource person. Late registration-Informal get-togethers. Encampment for Citizenship meeting: Saal Lesser Faculty meeting: Dr. Morton Sobel, Anti Defamation League Townspeople meeting FILMS: "Crisis in Levittown, Pa." "All the Way Home" Montgomery Bus Boycott THE SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NEGRO COM- MUNITY. (The adjustment the Negro community has made to de facto segregation. Political power, economic power, channels of mobility, reward allocation system; consequences of integration on these structures and the sources of resistance to change.) Speakers: Ted Cobb, Deputy Director, Chicago Urban League Herbert Hill, Labor Secretary, NAACP Informal coffee discussions Introductory session. Review of Friday's programs. Remarks: The relation between theoretical knowledge and social action programs-Eleanor P. Wolf, Department of Sociology, Merrill-Palmer School. Curtis Gans, National Affairs Vice-President of the National Student Asso- ciation, will speak on the sit-in movement and its implications for the Northern student. THE DYNAMICS OF ACTION Panel A general survey of organizations working against discrimination, the tech- niques they use, the resources they have to offer. Emphasis will be given to ways for student groups to work with community organizations on the prob- lems of the community. Speaker: Mrs. Frances R. Cousens, Research Direc- tor, Michigan Fair Employment Practices Commission. WORKGROUPS (Second Meeting) THE PROBLEMS. IMMEDIATE STEPS FOR STUDENTS TO TAKE, LONG RANGE POSSIBILITIES TO BEAR IN MIND. This second meeting of the workgroups will consider concrete programs of action, the resources needed to make them effective, their orgasization, and their relation to other stu- dent and community activity. Delegation meetings Delegations from colleges will assess the relevance of workgroup recom- mendations to their own campus situation, will discuss priority programs for the coming year on their campus and particular problems; e.g.,, re- sources, personnel, etc., with which they need assistance Students from the University will meet to discuss action program i Ann Arbor. Banquet Speaker: MORRIS MILGRAM, speaking on his interracial Princeton hous- ing development. Greetings: Lt. Governor John Swainson Social Banquet Speaker: JAMES FARMER, Program Director, NAACP Presentation and vote on workgroup and delegation recommendations, and selection of an inter-college student committee to coordinate future activity. I I I IP Koch , ....3 McGinn. ...... 2, Rinckey .......9 Brefeld ,..... .2 Mogk.......17 Liakonis .... 9 :j Marcereau .. .15 Kerr ........16Z Brodshaw .... 33?j H 30 25 9 9 12 10 11 25 10 BB 21 9 11 8 9 11 sO 31 25 5 11 13 9 9 7 11 W] 4 4 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 1 1 1 It's not too late to hop on the right one-before graduation time. if you're interested in a business of your own and no limit on earn- ings, you should look into the advantages of a career in life insurance selling. i 10:30 P.M. SATURDAY, APRIL 30 9 A.M. 10 A.M. 2 P.M. 4:15 P.M. 6 P.M. 'MIajor League Standings There's a lot that you may not have realized about this absorb- ing business. Let us show you what a career in life insurance can mean to you. ROLAND D. BENSCOTER General Agent 227 Municipal Court Building Ann Arbor, Michigan NOrmandy 3-4151 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia STORE NOW - NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Pittsburgh .. 9 3 .750 San Francisco . 8 4 .667 Los Angeles ... 7 5 .583 Milwaukee ..,.. 6 5 .545 St. Louis......5 6 .455 Philadelphia .. 5 7 .416 Cincinnati..4 9 .308 Chicago........ 3 8 .273 YESTERDAY'S SCORES Los Angeles 9. Chicago 4 Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 5 only games scheduled TONIGHT'S GAMES Pittsburgh at Philadelphia San Francisco at Los Angeles only games scheduled AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Detroit.........5 2 .714 New York ,..5 3 .625 Washington «.. 5 5 .500 Kansas City ... 4' 4 .500 Boston......... 4 5 .444 Baltimore ..... 4 5 .444 Chicago ....... 3 4 .429 Cleveland ......2 4 .333 YESTERDAY'S SCORES Kansas City 3, Detroit 1 Washington 5, New York 4 Baltimore 8, Boston 3 Only games scheduled TONIGHT'S GAMES Detroit at Kansas City Cleveland at Chicago Boston at Baltimore Only games scheduled PAY LATER Gold Bond Cleaners 515 East William Your Campus Cleaner GB 2 2 3 4 5 GB 14 z 2 2 2 2%~ I 11 i "Your Best Bet -Call A Vet" VETERAN"'S CAB NO 3-4545 NO 2-4477 NO 3-5800 Shuttle Service Between Wayne Metro. Airport and Union CAB SERVICE TO WILLOW RUN and WAYNE MAJOR Airports Callour office for group rates III I i SUNDAY, MAY 1 12:30-D P.M. A STUDENTS ARE INVITED TO REGISTER FOR PART OR ALL OF THE CONFER- ENCE AT ROOM 3C OF THE MICHIGAN UNION. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE KEYNOTE ALL PROGRAMS WILL TAKE PLACE IN THE UNION-3rd FLOOR We Go Anywhere 24-Hour Serviee . . . r 11 Ill E~i HOUR Dry Cleaning by ARMEN The Most In Dry Cleaning Less weight, less care, more comfort in wash'n wear Start your own COOL wave (to last all summer) with one or more of these dunk- able, drip-dryable, non- wiltable lightweight suits. 75% Dacron. 25% Cotton THE WORKGROUPS (Friday and Saturday, 2-4 P.M.) The task of the workgroups will be to develop concrete programs of action. Each of the workgroups is concerned with some area of potential action on the part of students. The workgroups will suggest specific programs in these areas and should recommend steps to implement these programs in as much detail as possible. These recommendations will be presented to the conference as a whole for approval at the Sunday session. Specifically, the workgroups will be concerned with these questions: 1) What are the problems and what is their extent? 2) What are the forces which hinder solution of the problems? 3) What are the concrete possibilities of student action? The last question will be considered in terms of specific programs: the form of the action; the manner in which the action is to be or- ganized; the resources on which the action program will draw. After the topic heading of each workgroup are listed problems pos- sibly suited to student action. These items do not constitute an agenda; they are suggestions, listed in order to delimit the ground each work- group will cover (either in whole or in part), and to exemplify the level of specificity on which each group will operate. WORKGROUP I: INCREASING NEGRO EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Suggested focus: Canvassing employers willing to hire Negroes to apply for jobs that are open; educational programs on FEPC and com- .amnt&filih ,wn.dure. increaing onnortunities for acquiring additional WORKGROUP V: DIRECT NON-VIOLENT ACTION Suggested focus: Techniques of sit-in; picketing; running of test- cases; decorum & procedure; public relations; desirable degree of or- ganizational structure; etc. WORKGROUP VI: FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES . Suggested focus: Coordinated activity over a number of campuses against national organization to change its policy; encouraging Negroes and other minorities to seek membership; cooperation between different fraternities; university action against chapters which discriminate; etc. WORKGROUP VII: INTEGRATION IN CAMPUS ACTIVITIES AND SOCIAL LIFE Suggested focus: Encouraging.Negroes to seek positions of leadership in student activities; establishing interracial clubs and social groups; kinds of activity useful for promoting meaningful contact between White and Negro students; etc. WORKGROUP VIII: DEVELOPING THE ACTION POTENTIAL OF THE NEGRO COMMUNITY Suggested focus: Developing awareness of the full extent of the prob- lem; channels of communication between student groups and the town Negro community; promoting an action orientation in the Negro stu- dent; etc. WORKGROUP IX: HIGHER EDUCATION Suggested focus: Encouraging Negroes to seek higher education; providing scholarship aid; combatting quotas in college admission 11 1 1 Ili II I v I 0