THE MICHIGAN DAILY :T] THE MICHIGAN DAILY T acv Yi. rill VAW ia>> mvm-+ 11 , Tooting for Tickets anel Views Discrimination a RA KRAPOH Membership; and Mrs. Hillary Bis- The ruling states that University scussion sponsored by sell, vice-president of Michigan services will be denied to owners hapter of the Nation- NAACP. and landlords who discriminate in )n for the Advance- Moderator of the panel, J. Edgar the rental or sale of housing be- ,red People analyzed Edwards, campus minister for the cause of race, color, religion, creed, )mbating discrimina- Congregational, Disciples, Evan- national origin or ancestry. mpus housing, sorori- gelical and Reform guild, asked Urges Ruling ernities, and the re- the panel what were the main fac- Blacklisting -rulingthat stu- of students in regard tors involved in combating dis- dents could not live in houses ,tion Sunday night. crimination in the University. which are owned by those who of the panel were discriminate-was urged by Mrs. vis, vice-president for Discuss Bylaw Bissell if, after a complaint was rs and a member of Mrs. Bissell said that there made, investigated and the owner should be "strong positive imple- was warned, the discriminatory mentation" by the University of practices continued. its bylaw 2.14. "The University "There must be teeth is the im- must say 'We do not permit dis- plementation of the bylaw," she crimination in any area within sotds Our jurisdiction' Lewis said "I am not sure the (Bylaw 2.14 says "The University ruling is adequate, but it is the shall not discriminate against any first step. The problem of the person because of race, color, reli- University in the community has gion, creed, national origin or become very complex. ancestry. Further, it shall work for "There is the feeling that a i the elimination of discrimination man's home is his castle and that (1)zIndprivateorganizations re- cases in which just a few students Scognized by the University and are taken into a private home (2) from noi-University sources must be separated from cases in where students and the employees which renting is a business." of the University are involved.") Need Complaints j Calling for a "change of climate" Seder stressed the fact that in by bringing about new bylaws so order for the University to act that students can become better that it must have a volume of educated to the facts of discrimi- complaints. "We must have evi- nation, Mrs. Bissell said this "will dence to prove discrimination." be impossible for the administra- The issue of whether or not By- tion or SGC to do unless a profes- lay 2.14 and the SGC regulationi sional individual or group is estab- are adequate to meet the problemsj ES A. LEWIS lished which would coordinate the of bias in fraternities and sorori- pes Discrimination activities of all working toward the ties also came up. end of discrimination." The SGC ruling on membership )r Human Relations Hire Professional in Student Organizations is as James Seder, '61, who She cited the "lack of time, follows, "All recognized student of Student Govern- l's Human Relations skills, and continuity of effort on organizations shall select mem- and Committee on the part of students and adminis- bership and afford opportunities andCommitteeon_ trators" as the reasons why a to members on the basis of person- professional should be hired. al merit and not race, color, reli- T T The Ann Arbor community stu- gion, creed, national origin or SH ours dents who are products of segre- ancestry." -gated communities and alumni, Ultimate Goal Exp la iwho bring pressure to bear on the "The ultimate goal of this ruling students, sororities, fraternities Is to have groups select members and the University are responsible on the basis of Personal- merit. In LC w ork for discrimination here at the order to do this top priority must University, she said. go to the elimination of bias Arbor Direct Action Communication is the first prob- clauses in sorority and fraternity as scheduled a series lem to be solved in combating dis- constitutions," Seder said. coffee hours through crimination in the University, "Part of the motivating pressure ted persons may meet Lewis said. of eliminating discrimination must{ of the organization. Need Education come from the minority groups. "More education for students Members in minority groups must coffee hour will be! concerning discrimination is also rush in order for any progress to 1 Ho d St necessary. It seems strange that an be made." ach Wednesday afters institution committed to and which Lewis pointed out that no out- according fterJudexists only for education should side organization should be able according to Judy have this problem." to prevent a local group from d, member of te Seder emphasized that a "mili- granting membership to an in- rIng committee. tant spirit must be developed in dividual, and that it is for the e AADAC members minority groups in demanding good of the local group to do so, picket local branches their rights." Communication to since these individuals are impor- res whose Southern all groups is necessary also so that tant members of the community. legedly discriminate students can be made aware of oes- their responsibilities in improving P he - eir ninth month, the the conditions of minority seg- pa1h l All010$ nstrations were held ments, he said. ore the campus out- Whether or not the University's S. Kresge Co. and off-campus housing regulation is 5odJL P led e e outlets of the down- adequate and what further steps es s store and the F. W. could be taken to implement it r i 'n Itx ra ioh for in + ^n m ^ai ~ SAA: Ask Groups To Petition For S pace By RALPH KAPLAN Any recognized student organ- ization which submits a petition by Tuesday, November '22, may request office and/or desk space on the second floor of the Student Activities Building, the SAB Ad- ministrative Board announced yesterday. No preference will be given to those groups who already occupy offices on the second floor. Will Review Petitions After all petitions have been submitted, the board will review each petition and assign space ac- cording to the needs and merits of each group petitioning. Only registered, recognized student or- agnizations will be allowed to petition. The board has set a tentative goal of finishing this project by the beginning of the second semes- ter and hopes the organizations will be able to move in during orientation week. Supply Information Each group must include in their petition the following: number of members, extent and type of cor- respondence, what they would usd the office for, extent of files and other equipment, and length of time for which they want the office. They must also tell what mate- rial they will keep in the .office, their estimate of the value of the group, contributions to campus and contributions made elsewhere, name of their faculty 'adviser, names 'of officers. Once a group has obtained an office they would be required only to submit a report each year as to how they used their office. They would not be required to re- petition each year, however. - Challenge Seeks Students For CelloquiumSeminars Registration for participation in the Challenge program seminars will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p'.m. today in the Fishbowl and the main floor of the Union.-' The seminars are centered around the group's topic for this semester "The Challenge of Ameri- can Civil Liberties." They are be- -ing held in conjunction with the colloquium weekend and will run from tomorrow through Sunday. Faculty members.are leading the discussions. Prof. Gordon Atkinson of the chemistry department, Prof. A. K. Stevens of the English de- partment and Prof. George Men- rodes of the philosophy depart- ment will discuss civil liberties and their relation to various reli- gious questions. Prof. Raymond Young of the education school will conduct the seminar on inequalities in educa- tional opportunity. Prof. Spencer Kimball of the law school and Prof. George Piranian of the mathematics department will dis- (uss racial discrimination and the- rights and obligations of minority groups. Discussion of Congress and American civil liberties will be led by Prof. George Peek of the political science department. Prof. Philip Elving of the chemistry de- partmnent will consider the free- dom of the teacher and student and, the rights and obligations of each. Prof. Robert Angell of the soci- ology department will lead dis- cussion of the problems of aca- demic freedom in the University. -Daily-Henry Yee PUBLICITY-Members of the Acacia Dixieland Band perform on the steps of the General Library in yet another stunt for campus activities. These musicians, representing the MUSKET production of "Kismet," Joined publicists for Soph Show and Junior Girls' Play yesterday. WORLD TRA VELER: Mukle Recalls 70 Years As Performing Cellist Tomorrow at 8 Htillel presents PROF. S. JOSEPH FAUMAN of Eastern Michigan University speaking on "THE JEWISH FAMILY FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION" in the series "Alook at the Jewish Community in America" All are welcome 1429 HillStreet By CAROLINE DOW "I hope you won't be shocked, my concluding number is "Captain; Cockchafer."{ "It's about a sailor getting off a ship having had a little too much rum," a little lady, with a, gentle British accent, named May Mukle said, ,concluding a cello recital Sunday night in Aud. A. This white-haired, blue-gowned cellist, on her 26th visit to Ann Arbor, drew three encores and then withdrew offstage with her piano accompanist, Sutherland Ideler and her cello. Miss Mukle has played for over three score and ten years since her debut as a concert cellist at age nine in her native England. She has played to the entire world except South America and Russia and "hopes" to play there also. Plays During War A contemporary and "pal" of Pablo Casals, Miss Mukle was a member of Dame Myra Hess's en- tertainment corps in England dur- ing World War II. She appeared frequently at the National Gallery concerts, which were played at noon, air raid or quiet, to keep up the national spirit. Before the war she ran a club, called the "Mainly Musicians Club,"a few doors from Oxford Circus. As it was in the basement,9 it became an air-raid shelter dur- ing the war with Miss Mukle asI air-raid warden.a "Oh, I did all sorts of things during the war," she said. At the; club, if there was no help, "I was barman, cook, waitress and sometimes slept on two tables in the back, if things got rough." Ins addition she did up to five per-s formances a day for the troops. There was a raid one time dur- ing one of her performances in Devon. "They told everyone where to go except those on the stage.f So we kept on playing as theI bombs dropped. I felt like Nero1 fiddling while Rome burned," she said with an unmistakable twinkle in her eyes. Performs "Schelomo" In London and New York she, made her first performance of Bloch's "Schelomo." Numerous works are dedicated to her, among them a group of studies on folkc tunes written for her by Ralph' Vaughn Williams. She has played many times with Casals in theI Schubert "Quintet for Two Cellos." Of Casals, she said, "we are 1 contemporaries. We sometimes play together, sometimes we evenI play each other accompaniment, Just for fun in a room. I always called him Pablo, sometimes "Pablissimo." Breaks Arm Thirteen months ago Sunday this spry lady broke her arm and cracked her skull in a car accident LAST CHANCEI OHIO STATE TRIP $9.00 must register TODAY call NO 5-8215 between 3:00 and 9:00 after 9:00 NO 5-8367 DIAL NO 8-6416 I 11 Seminarg of Religious Faiths BUDDHI SM Tuesday, November 15, 4:15 P.M. leader: Alex Wayman Visiting Professor -Far Eastern Thought SIKH RELIGION Tuesday, November 29, 4:15 P.M. leader: Santokh Singh Anant, Officer of Sikh Diwan Society Tuesday, December 6, 4:15 P.M leader: Carl S. Hawkins U. of M. Law School OPEN TO ANYONE ALL SESSIONS at LANE HALF Sponsored by The Office of Religious ,jHrars I 4 Ann Arbor residents who rush sororities this year may pledge under a new off-quota system if they do not plan to live in a soror- ity house next year, Mary Schae- fer, '62, has annouhced. The new requirement gives Ann Arbor women the option of pledg- ing as a "live-in" member under the regular sorority quota of 65 active members, or pledging as a "live-out" member outside the quota. Live-out members will not pay board and room fees. A live-out member may move into the sorority house any semes- ter that there is a vacancy after live-in and transfer members have been housed. They are not under obligation, however, to live in the house at any time during their college attendance. Club To '1 0Hear Music, Poetry Music and poetry of the German romantic period will highlight a program sponsored by the German Club at 8 p.m. today in the Hussey Room of the Michigan League. Soprano Anne DePree Reisig will sing German "Lieder" by Brahms, Wolf and Strauss. "Lieder" are songs inspired by famous poems which were not originally written for music, Prof. Joachim Bruhn of the German department said. Composers would base their music on the poetry, often using a dif- ferent melody for each verse. Miss Reisig will be accompanied on the piano by Prof. Otto Graf of the German department. Professors Harold Scholler and Hans Walther, also of the German department, will do readings of German romantic poets, Before the main program, there will be folk singing, accompanied by guitar and a tape-recorded faculty chorus. Refreshments will follow the program, MAY MJKLE .cellist, air warden in Southern Rhodesia. A year later, again on the 13th of the month, she played to an Ann Arbor audience. "I am in my second childhood. I have learned to play all over again," she chuckled. She demon- strated her arm and visual exer- cises and then said, "It's really a pleasure to see you all again, a double pleasure, because, (due to her skull injury) I see you all double." Since her accident, all her selec- tions are played from nemory. "I am sort of like the wreck of the Hesperus," she laughed. She did her arm exercises again and said, "But I shall be all right, in time." Socialists Club o Hear Speaker The Democratic Socialist Club will present a program entitled "Politics, Peace and the Beat Generation," at 8 p.m. tonight in Rm. 3R-s of the Michigan Union. David McReynolds, a represen- tative of the War Resistors League and the Student Peace Union, will be the featured speaker. NZ,: MUSKET 1960 presents KISMET November 30, December 1,2,3 Matinee Dec. 3 Tickets at Michigan Union November 14 thru 23 1:15 to 5:00 Daily Tried Regular ,. Filter Tried Cigarettes? Other Menthol Cigarettes? NOW I Come Up...A11 The Way Up U. of M. YOUNG REPUBLICANS present a discussion on lJT .wl0M- ER .w- to the MENTHOL MAGIC 0 .910. of KOOL! I 11 .111 ,I i I