BIAS: Council To Judge Sorority (Continued from Page 1) maker," will be presented Dec. 11, 12 and 13. The opera, presented in con- junction with the music school, has been changed from the ori- ginally scheduled production of Bizet's "Carmen" to Rossini's "The Barber of Seville." "The music school decided they couldn't do Carmen without a Carmen," Skinner explained. Satire, Tragedy End Series Ben Jonson's biting "Volpone" on April 9, 10, 11 and Sophocles' "Electra" on April 23, 24 and 25 will complete the series. Season tickets, sold by speech department students, cost $3, $4.50 and $6. Tickets for the in- dividual performances to go on. sale Nov. 5, will be $.75, $1.10 and $1.40. "Season tickets will soon be on sale at a booth on the corner of State and East Un iv e r s it y Streets," Skinner added. Schools Announce Programs The Wayne State University Theater will present Sandy Wil- son's "The Boyfriend" on Oct. 17, 18,. 23, 24 and 25. "The Adding Machine" by Elmer Rice will be presented next on Nov. 14, 15, 20, 21 and 22. "Peter Pan" will be produced for the holidays on Dec. 12, 13, 19 and 20. Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge" will be present- ed Feb. 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21. Shaw's "Misalliance" on March 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21 and "A Mid- summer's Night Dream" by Shakespeare on May 1, 2, 7, 8 and 9 will end the season. The Eastern Michigan Players will present three one-act plays on Oct. 30, 31 and Nov. 1. "The Crucible" by Arthur Miller will be presented on Jan. 14-17. SGC, prohibits recognition of new groups which discriminate be- cause of "race, religion or color." Sigma Kappa came on campus in 1954. Acting in good faith with Uni- versity regulations is the other condition for maintenance of recognition. Denied Any Pressure Speaking before debate began, Miss Busch denied that the local chapter had ever had any pres- sure from the National Council. However, Gloria Tennant, '57, a de-activated Sigma Kappa, told The Daily the executive secretary Mrs. Taggart had told the local in the fall of 1955 that it could not pledge a Chinese rushee. Miss Tennant, said active§ had expressed favorable opinion of Eudora Jen, '58Ed. Cannot Pledge Chinese When Miss Jen's name was brought up, Mrs. Taggart is re- ported to have commented, "You can carry that girl down to the last party but I will not let you pledge her." "If, one chapter - is suspended because it pledged a Negro, ours must be too - all chapters which do so must be," President of In- ter-House Council Robert War- rick, '57E, said during debate. Having found the National Council in violation, SGC then studied possible courses of action It was assumed, according to the plan adopted, that the national' sorority was guilty at the time but that the local chapter was inno- cent of anything but representing a national group whose policy violates University regulations. Should Help Local Thus, the committee said, every effort should be made to keep the local intact. A statement from the national organization is a possible solution, the committee said in the state- ment adopted, but "any future acts of 'good faith' would have to be strong enough to overcome the apparent acts of 'bad faith' per- petuated at Tufts and Cornell," the committee concluded. The specific recommendation adopted, the most liberal suggest- ed, allowed September of this year to "resolve the violation." CIty---Musicians To Rehearse The Ann Arbor Civic Symphony will hold its first rehearsal at 7:15 tonight in the Ann Arbor High School Instrumental room. All interested University stu- dents and Ann Arbor residents are invited to attend, according to George Wilson, vice-president of the National Music Camp at In- terlochen and former conductor of the Tucson, Arizona, Sympho- ny Orchestra, who will conduct -Daily-Robert Kanner ON THE DIAG - The casual freshman boy hands the equally casual freshman girl a light for. her cigarette. Scene of more mixer action than the places officially designated for such acti- vity, the diag was particularly active this past Orientation Week. Freshmen Wel-Oriented; Pick Up. Campus Folklore, The University's Men's Glee' Club will hold its annual fall try-. outs tonight at 7:15 p.m. in room 3G of the Union, according to Pete Patterson, '59, publicity manager. Men from all colleges of the Uni- versity are invited to attend. (Use of this column for announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only.) * * * Rifle Club, meeting, Sept. 23, 7:00 p.m. Rifle Range. * * * Michigan Flyers, Inc., membership meeting, Sept. 24, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 3003 Student Activities Building. American Chemical Society-Student Affiliate, Tour of Chemistry Building and Organizational Meeting, Sept. 24, 7:30 p.m., Room 1200 Chemistry Build- ing. - * Folklore Society, business meeting and elections, all old members must attend, Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m., Room 3K Union. * * * Handkerchiefs are passe. No longer must the eager-eyed freshman girl drop snowy linens in her wake to attract eager-eyed freshman boys or even more in- terested upperclassmen. An ob- server on campus during the aca- demic lull of Orientation Week could hardly help noticing other more or less subtle methods pre- vailing. Boys of both upper and lower classman status casually throng the steps of the League. The sun is brightly shining, and if they're in luck all may be well with the, world. Perhaps an attractive well- oriented miss will fall at their feet, of sunstroke. Or maybe one will fall of a dainty ankle sprained on the League's uneven paving. Center of Activity Being a new dorm, Markley has been appointed by the . more prominent part of the University's 2:1 ratio as the most promising, site for recreational activity. Gallantly, several campus boy scouts offered their services to operate Markley's elevators, pad and pencil in hand. Another gal- lant was for a while handling the switchboard there. Possibly he had something to do with the boy who called one night and asked to be connected with any girl in Markley, he didn't care who. He was a fraternity man' and he. wanted a dater Unfortunately the girl he was finally connected with wasn't similarly impressed, she didn't know what ,a fraternity was. Diag Also Popular The diag has also, as in years past, proved to be a strongholdI for a pickup, although we are as- sured that this is the wrong word1 to use on college campuses. A man-about-campus approaches an obviously fershman girl with that never failing line: "Do you have a light?" She looks down at the ground, then paves the way with a shyt yes. "What's your name?"t CARLOSY MONTOYA WORLD'S GREATEST FLAMENCO GUITARIST t FRIDAY EVENING 8:30 1 SCOTTISH RITE AUDITORIUM MASONIC TEMPLE, DETROIT Tickets available at: DISC SHOP, 1210 S. University Ann Arbor $3.30, $2.75, $2.20, $1.65 "M" Club, first meeting Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m., "M" Club Room, Yost Field House, President Karl Lutomskl urges all members to attend. the city orchestra. Still looking at the M engraved on the diag, she tells him Mumpf. "Hometown?" "Mumpf." "Will you go out with me Sat- urday night?" "Why, I sure will," she an- swers. "I've been dying to go out with you ever since I saw you. Aren't - you the president of the Union, or the business manager of The Daily, or somebody Im- portant on campus? Well, you look just like it." Boys are not the only aggres- sors. The freshman girl in the know has been filing in and out et the local bookstores every fifteen minute on the fifteenth minute. She's already bought her books eighteen times, but maybe this time when she buys them some "man" will carry them back to the dorm for her. Ask a freshman girl what the alma mater is. She's been through Orientation Week. She'11 tell her name, hometown, major - and she'll even ask yours. TU' Library Opens Stacks Daily to All As a result of the cut in the budget for this year the General Library is continuing its summer policy of opening the stacks daily to all members of the student body, faculty and staff. According to Fred L. Dimock of the General Library Circulation Department, the decreased budget prevented the hiring of added personnel needed to operate the stack service. The open shelves, he added, have necessitated exit inspections of all books, brief cases and packages. Access to the stacks is presently gained through entrances on the second floor near the public cata- logue, opening on the fifth floor of the stacks. A new first floor stack entrance, which opens on the third floor of the stacks, is now being planned. Because students now have ac- cess to the stack collections which have been rearranged for their convenience, Dimock expects an increase in the Library's circula- tion. G&S To Hold First Meeting The organizational meeting of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society will be held at 7:30 tonight in the League Ballroom, according to Jim Bob Stephenson, of the speech dept. Those unable to attend the meeting should call NO 3-5408 be- tween 4 and 5:30 p.m. today, he said. The society, led ,by Stephenson, dramatics director, and Robert Denison, '59SM, musical .director, will present "Patience" this se- mester. Positions are open in the musical cast and in all phases of production. f~DIALN08-6416 Week Days at 7 and 9 P.M. ENDING TONIGHT * r - ..mwm 11 GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY Organizational Meeting TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23rd 7:30 P.M. II