.,~. ~- f 0 Ppa 10-Wednesday March 19 1980--The Michig7an Daily ..:............ MORE MONEY CHANNELED INTO GENERAL AID FUNDS As if getti most studer with paying turn to sch financial ai But findi plicated pr Alumni Ass student's m many other Why can scholarship ching for a different off THIS WA 1969, the C publication Scholarship Tracking down sc BY JOYCE FRIEDEN tained a complete listing of monies available to students as well as eligibility requirements and ing a degree here isn't hard enough, application information. Here one could read nts at the University also must deal about the Joseph Knitzer scholarship for for the sheepskin.*Many students promising young violinists or the Edwin Hin- iolarships as a potential source of sdale scholarship for graduate students in the d. Museum of Zoology. ng a scholarship is often a com- University officials offer different ex- rocess, involving inquiries at the planations as to why the book is no longer made ociation, the department office of the available. "The University is trying to save ajor, the Office of Financial Aid, and money," said Maxwell Reade, professor of sources before the money is found. mathematics and chairman of the LSA Scholar- 't information on all University ship Committee. s be found in one place? Must sear- In addition, Reade explained that the nature of scholarship involve treks to and from many scholarships makes it impractical to ad- ices? vertise them. "Many endowments are given to S NOT always the case. As late as the departments to use at their discretion," he office of Financial Aid put out a said. called "University of Michigan ACCORDING TO Harvey Grotrian, Director of s, Fellowships, and Prizes." It con- Financial Aid, the booklet eventually outlived its lolarships usefulness. "We (the Office of Financial Aid) are now able to expend the monies without putting out publications to advertise the scholarship programs," Grotrian explained. Grotrian cited an increase in the number of students applying for financial aid. "in 1975, 9,900 students applied for some sort of fun- ds . . . in 1979 that figure was up to 15,600," he said. The demise of the scholarship publication represented a fundamental change in the character of Financial Aid, according to Associate Director for Financial Aid Paulette Stallworth. "We do still have those pockets of money (in addition to our general aid fund)," Stallworth explained. "But now people are not initially applying for those scholarships. Instead, our office is selecting them." STALLWORTH SAID many of the smaller scholarships once advertised in the now-defunct simplified booklet have since become a part of the general funds administered through the Office of Finan-, cial Aid (OFA). "When a student applies for financial aid, they are put on a list. We then notify those who are eligible for certain scholar- ships (such as the Michigan Annual Giving and Regents' Alumni Scholarships)," she said. Stallworth emphasized that the current method of applying for scholarship money is more efficient than past application procedures, because "they apply for many scholarships with one application." According to Grotrian, there has been a gradual shift in priorities away from giving money based on merit-related criteria, and toward giving money to financially needy students instead. "It was not until 1965 that the government developed programs to aid financially needy students." C I 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S~. . ~ . . . ..*~*** ~~ . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . .*......*................ SPartacus Youth League Forums A Marxist View To Defend Worker's Rights Sellout Gimmickry vs. Class Struggle Case Histories Speakers: HELEN KELLY. Former Recording Secretary, UAW Local 2001. Former Member, Clericals for a Democratic Union. National Com- mittee, Spartacus Youth League. GEORGE CRAWFORD, Spartacist League Central Committee. Spar- tacist League Trade Union Commission. THURSDAY, MARCH 20-7:30 PM Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library University of Michigan FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 994-9313 LSA/MSA Funded Labor Donated UofM women in Communiaions, Inc. presents A PANEL DISCUSSION WITH PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATORS: + an advertising agency representative *a WJBK-TV producer * a fashion consultant. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19,-at 7p.m. CONFERENCE ROOM 3, MICHIGAN UNION State House committee OKs divestment bills LANSING (UPI) - The liberal House Civil Rights Committee approved on party line votes yesterday a package of bills prohibiting investment of state funds in white-ruled South Africa. The bills, sent to the House floor on 7- 1 votes, require public colleges to sell all holdings in companies operating in South Africa and prohibit similar in- vestments by state pension funds. They also ban deposit of state funds in banks which loan money directly to South African operations. REPUBLICAN-BACKED amen- dments extending the ban of a laundry list of countries including the Soviet Union which have been accused of human rights violations were rejected by the panel. On the final votes, all GQP committee members either abstained orvoted no. Similar measures have died in the House in previous sessions. "THERE CAN be no doubt that U.S. investments help support a brutal, racist regime in South Africa," said sponsor Perry Bullard, whose Ann Ar- bor district includes the University, which has been criticized for its South Africa-related holdings. The state's largest college, Michigan State University, already has divested. "The legislation we are proposing would ensure that workers' retirement funds are not used to support apartheid, and will also get our universities out of the business of supporting legal segregation," he said. A spokesman for the, Michigan Manufacturers Association opposed the package as an unconstitutional restraint on investments. The banking measure was opposed by Robert Duff, a vice president with the National Bank of Detroit. The measure "could have a serious impact on industrial enterprises located here in Michigan. .. which bring money into the state from foreign countries and we feel greatly benefi the state," he said. Bullard stressed the bill is limited to loans made directly to South African operations. "We do not intend to prohibit loans to any company operating in the U.S. that happens to have a subsidiary operating in South Africa," he said. Psychoanalyst Fromme dies' at 79 in Switzerland A 'OLD & NEW DREAMS Friday, March 28;z 8& 10:30 University Club OKC IIARLI er pse (Continued from Page 1) State University, founding the school's Institute of Psychology. Fromm's work was closely associated with that of American psychoanalysts Karen Horney and Harry Stack Sullivan. TOGETHER, the three formed a group known as the neo-Freudian psychoanalysts, whose theories' examined the social influences con- tributing to neuroses and thus moved away from Freud's em'phasis on purely individual experiences and family relationships. In such works as "Escape fronS Freedom" (1941), "Man for Himself (1947), "The Forgotten Language" (1951) and "Sane Society" (1955), Fromm pioneered in applying psychoanalytic thought to social and cultural problems. These theories led Fromm to assert that the social and economic conditions of a society produced certain specific personality types but they did not mean the individual should allow himself t be formed and shaped by authoritariai societies such as the Nazi regime he himself fled. In this case, Fromm wrote, man should develop and hold to his own standards. 1E ADEM/ED B[ACKWELL Tickets - S6.00o on sale now at Mich. Union BOX Office, Schoolkids I and Discount Records info 763-2071 1 Do a Tree a Favor: Recyle Your Daily I I " a, m I I You've earned a place in the elite group that can say ~'I was an '81 Grad from the University of Michigan. "/ Be able to prove it to your children. Have your portrait taken for the 1981 MICHIGANENSIAN (U of M's Yearbook) and for Eff