Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 30, 1 )7 i Zichigamua:Test q (Continued from Page 1) I day, when the pace of campus by University students who have There really was a tribe nam- life was slower and the atmos- miled sex discrimination and ed Michigamua - it was. the' phere more light - hearted. civil rights complaints with the namesake of the state. Though Yet Michiamua survives federal government is perhaps it is difficult to unearth the ex- . most important to the Tribe's f a tradi tion i i a > I: n ... ti 1 n M I C H I G A M U A was founded in 1901 by a group of men in that year's junior class. They were members of a PhiIns- ophy Devartment discussion. ! /, I I, i N '-N 9 x t d gamua moved into its perma- neut "wigwam" in the Union Tower. Recognized as an im- portant senior honorary by the Board of' the Union. they oc- r V C nn v 1'ctm n is i~ o reasons of'orhthe Indianhou r--. C L L, U1111UL LU S. tJLR%'4*LAS IS%' C.X- ThnwhtiaiEvni st ti-I.------r - - 11L4 3willy --------11"'rt LO% F "* '** /;.. VA *I; % **,**** -J ;L act reasons for theIndianfor en atEven current troubles: "A Title IX group called The Hot Air Club, cu'iied the space free of charge, mat, it is apparent from tradi- most dedicated members have violator" and "an all-male hon- and became interested in form- and have ever since. tion that the early members be- orary whose activities are bas- ing a campus-wide service or- ea-lieved Indians to be fierce and swer, ed on a parody of Native Amer- ganization. In a history of the THERE IS little doubt that noble, suitable models for their A C C O R I N G T O ican culture." ; founding written several years the braves were interested in purposes. . . before the Second World War, service, but seldom did Michi- The Tribe is still wrapped in John Feldkamp, Unversity BOTH THE University and an old brave wrote of the Uni- gamua as a whole tackle a spe- these Indian traditions begun meber direcTor be'an lcie the Dept. of Health, Edufcation versity's mood in 1901: cific program. Members worked by the founders. The Michiga- r o the Tribe alumni and Welfare (HEW) are inves- "With almost complete isola- through their individual activi- mua ideal, taken by members through so many eras tat its tigating the Tribe for alleged tion from social affairs of the ties. Setting a precedent that sa r ideal, taingb emer-s o ut so mtnyjastw at its violations of Title IX of the 1972 outside world for months at a' would last into the Sixties, the seriousness, is the proud war it group t give greater iEducation Amendments, the time, there was much greater earl" braves discussed campus rior - string and wise, a sym- ~eanin to your senior year." federal regulation which forbids occasion for close association events and planned how each, bol of virility. . sex discrimination by certain and that interchange of ideas as an individual, could worl The University's self-appoint- University organizations and' that made the - term 'College1 to solve problems and aid tI- THE ORGANIZATION seems ed chief booster, football an- departments. Spirit' mean something whichfl faculty, the administration, a' anachros t cy o tecntry says "It honors those men they Local Native Americans have it lacks today. Student activities other student groups. phan ftrn-f-th-cntY feel will do honor to the name charged that the group discri- centered, for the most part, "Our policy was to. wor days when college students of Michigan" minates against American In- around the various class organ- from within organizations, spot were sheltered from the social dians, mocks them, and posses-. izations . . Class politics soring nothing specifically. issues that concern many to- The label given Michigamua ses Indian artifacts to which it formed one of the major outlets wrote a 1911 brave in 1942. "Ar has no right. for individual enthusiasm . . ." as I remember it, we felt t --. - _ n te mist o thse cassexerted a good real of inf So members of the Tribe In the midst of these class e - more than if we had MARLON BRANDO in 1970 old and new - have begun to competitions and fiery activity beed our activities as Mit take stock of their traditions, of in student organizations an baled projects." ' the organization and secrets snorts, the Hot Air Club became . B they hold dear. Many mem- Michigamua, dedicating itself It is difficult to measure Tribe's impact' on the ca:np Gillo Pontecorvo's masterful film of neo-colon- bers are baffledby te gcom ito servdic tiothe Universit Itsbaffairs were oftenrmins. tlism and revolution. "Herefor more than in d somewhat in decades to come, such as a re-World War r same are cautiously consider- '' commendation that the Urive Battle of Algiers, Pontecorvo explores Fanon's .. but in the early 1900s it was' omnainta h rv ing the possibilities of change. foremost ofethe Tribe's pur- sity award "better - grad theme that through long-delayed and liberat- The braves are faced with a poses. sweaters . . . to all Major Ath ing violence the oppressed are returned to self showdown, and they will soon be letic Teams." Many meeting respect and adulthood."-Joan Mellen. Brando forced to look to their origins IN THE early years the were consumed by plans foi i ~group was; careful to divideI Tribe outings and armchair dis considers this to be one of his favorite per- to discover exactly what they merou p beto divter Tussions of campus activities. fomncs 1 are all about. membership between fraternity.csinofamuatvti. formances. re ab_!t. men and independents. By the'0 C C A S IO N A L L Y,itt mid-twenties, membership was i-fluence was substantial. The WED: HARA KIRI extended to any candidate who! Tribe played a part in the es !_ _ _ _met the requirements of the tablishment of the Michigan OTribe, regardless of fraternity Union, for many years a pow- CINEMA GUILD OLD ARCH. AUD. TONIGHT AT affiliation. Only men from the erful and, popular student or- Admission $1.25 7:00 & 9:05& literary and engineering schools -niation. It also conceived of IN DETRUOIT/19O6'1976 were originally eligible, but the Uniqn building itself, as well .------- --_ __ _ __ __ _ ..-___-___W____ __._._-____-___.____.__- 1NF M,' I' Mfr. tr s .1 tit aOoTi those restrictions were soon , as the Senior Council, the Uni- eT Jabandoned as well. iversity's first student self-gov- F E ~~Free Through Jan. 16 1Ierigbody FPROUD TRADITION The Tribe jumped from place enn oy U T Tto place, sometimes meeting in Whether the Tribe was trivial WORTH KNOWING i fraternities, for a time in a or significant, the Faculty Com- "U" VERBALLY AGREES 400 Artworks * room over a photo shop on Inittee on Student Affairs saw -Precious Metals-Ironwork State Street, then in a new fit i 1913 to grant it status as PCAatin&sW"" Scltreiles - building which stood on the lot "The Senior Society" on cam- HouRS W T6 Sat, sun now occupied by the Huron ipIS. REFUSES TO SIGN! 431 am-5 30 pm Fri 1-9 pm IC Valley National Bank on North In the first decade or two, { t ~CLOSED HOLIDAYS University. those selected for membership, PHONE 833-'900 In 1933, with the sponsorship or "tanned." underwent a harsh THE ETROI TINSTITUTE OF ARTS of honorary sachem Fielding physical initiation. Each "young Come to Membership Meeting to "Great Scalper" Yost, Michi- buck"-'received a birchmark in- Discuss Contract Ratification and --itation which directed him to be at the Tapnan Oak on the Pressure Tactics to Force "U" to J Ying at a certain time. The Give Us Our Contracts.fihting braves came from the G"wigwam" (headquarters) with a long rone between them. 'The randid-tes were tied to the rope 8:00 P.M. by leather thongs, then led back tn the wigwam for the initiation WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1 ritQs. ONE BRAVE of the era re- RACKHAMkAported that raw eggs were RAsmehred in his hair, paint was PHoTHEATERn is face, he was 0eneral body beating with wa sctlds, snow shoes, and other i Loom ____ -Lnlements carried by the e*, braves." With that, they had 4 "PqIqnd the test. They smoked the neare pine and became ...AND THE TIME ro baves. "nope Day", as it came to DLAKN 7Q'j. CI4Q.IS5 t~s PARPTy Ihknown, contined in milder 4 r J f -ns thronue 1973, when Na- IW --American conmlaints that WIT0 US ceremony made fun of In j dians forced initiation off cam plus, out of the public eye. i r'ice - .i i-S/ ,/ /p ' cottr 4 ,5 an A,, u . 7 i-Z B0 : Use Daily Classifieds 0