WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1954 'U' Music School Grad, Wins National Award .l National Music Sorority, Sigma Alpha Iota, has presented its Na- tional College Achievement Award for 1953-54 to Mary Catherine Hutchins Coffey, 1953 graduate of the University's School of Music. This award is presented each year to one coed, selected from the entire national membership, on the basis of superiority in scholarship, personality, student activities, sor- ority service, musical ability, and recommendations made by the chapters choosing her for the Prov- ince Award. Mrs. Coffey, who received this ; honor yesterday with a formal pre- sentation by Mrs. Gertrude Wood, national treasurer, at a musicale in the League, has a long record of honors, achievements and serv- ice. At commencement, she received the highest honor bestowed by the School of Music, and one not given every year, the Stanley Medal. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Mortar Board, Pi Kappa Lambda, Phi Kappa Phi, Senior Society, Al- pha Lambda Delta and Wyvern. Vice-president of the Alpha chap- ter of SAI, Mrs. Coffey was award- ed the SAI Sword of Honor last spring. She was also active in Mich- igan Singers, Bach Choir, Gilbert JGP There will be a meeting of the central committee of JGP at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 29 to decide on the name for the 1955 production. Room number will be posted in the League lobby. Couzens Hall Team Wins' WAA Honors A Chi 0's To Challenge 'A' Tourney Champions In Volleyball Playoffs No matter who wins the WAA- sponsored volleyball tournament, it will be Couzens Hall. This rather ambigious situation has come about because two teams from Couzens are competing for first place in A tourney finals. Seeing action in the A semifi- nals were Chi Omega vs. Couzens I and Mosher II vs. Couzens II. The latter was a very close game, with Couzens II edging out a 22 to 21 victory. After a somewhat slow start, the tournament got into full swing. Teams losing their first game went into the B tourney, while the win- ners entered the A tournament. A loss in the second round of games put a team out of the competition. Forty-seven teams entered the annual t o u r n e y, representing First Hand Report of Skirmish Given THE MICHIGAN DAILYPAGEV African Mau Mau Raid Pictured -Daily-Chuck Kelsey MARY H. COFFEY and Sullivan Society and the Opera Department of the music school. Her services include being presi- dent of Westminster Guild, mem- ber of the Chaplain's Staff at Uni- versity Hospital, Student Religious Association Council and World Uni- versity Service. This is the first time that this honor was given to a chapter at the University. Preceding the presentation was a coffee hour given by the Ann Arbor patronesses and alumnae group, and the Alpha chapter. The musical program included pi- ano solos by Barbara Gotz and Sal- ly Lutz, and a viola, cello and flute trio with Jean Horten, Char- lotte Lewis and Helen Snyder. r' L a s t D a y 30 of the best albums to select from, including NORCROSS -- HALLMARK CALIFORNIA ARTISTS at Chester Roberts Gifts 312 South. State Couzens 2 beat Couzens 1 in last night's volleyball game, 24-20. Alpha Chi Omega, B tourney champions, have chal- lenged Couzens 1. league houses, sororities and dor- mitories. Some housing groups had two or more teams. Those participating in the B semi-finals included Alpha Chi Omega vs. Victor Vaughan and Delta Gamma vs. Yost House. The B tourney finals were very close, but a strong Alpha Chi Ome- ga team defeated Yost House with a 22 to 19 score. The end of the tournament is not yet in sight, however, because B tourney champions have already asked for a challenge match with the runners-up of the A tourney. Holiday Breakfast Planned By SRA Students remaining in Ann Arbor for the Thanksgiving week-end have been invited to attend a Thanksgiving breakfast sponsored by SRA at Lane Hall at 9 a.m. Thursday. Reservations for the breakfast which is open to all students may be placed with Doris Harpole at Lane Hall before 4 p.m. today. For those students wishing to make use of study facilities during the weekend, the general library will be open from 8 a.m. through 6 p.m. tomorrow and Friday. The library will be closed Thurs- day, Saturday and Sunday. Divisional libraries will be open during their regularly scheduled hours Friday. WITH THE FATHER ALREADY IN CUSTODY, THIS KIKUYU FAMILY WATCHES THE STRIKING FORCE RAIDERS DEPART By SID KLAUS Special to The Daily NAIROBI, Kenya-Two or three times daily a string of trucks loaded with troops rumbles out from behind the barbed-wire gates of a tent encampment not far from the New Stanley Hotel in downtown Nairobi, to hunt Mau- mau in this modern, nervous East African capital. In the past six months these raids, conducted by the Striking Force of the Kenya Police, have become routine operations. They consist of small-scale repe- titions of Operation Anvil, the huge Mau-mau clean up campaign conducted last April by the Brit- ish Army and the Kenya police. A small section of the city is sur- rounded by the troops, the houses within the area are searched, and all the inhabitants are screened. Those without identification pap- ers are carted off to a detention camp. Prisoners Interviewed There a loyal Kikuyu tribe board interviews the prisoners; the ones said to be "hard-core" supporters are interned at one of the four huge guarded settlements outside the city. The raids seldom last more than an hour, and are usually carried out without violence. The Striking Force, which heads the mopping-up operations is re- sponsible only to the top echelon of the joint army-police command. It is manned by hand-picked Af- rican troops, representing every Kenya tribe except Kikuyu, and staffed by five British officers. Police officials estimate that the raids will be continued on a daily basis for at least another six months. Mau-mau Support Mau-mau has found its greatest support among the more than one million members of the Kikuyu tribe of central Kenya. In an ef- fort to halt the further spread of terrorism, the British government has resorted to a widespread use of its police powers. Since the begin- ning of the emergency, more than 30,000 Kikuyus, almost one-third of Nairobi's African population, have been arrested in the city, and removed to the settlement camps. A full-scale war, complete with tanks and bombers, is still being waged against an organized group of Mau-maus north of Nairobi, but within the capital itself, a shaky calm prevails. The largest problem now facing the city dwellers is the winning over and re-education of the Kikuyu youth. Meanwhile the uneasy day to day life of Nairobi continues. And even though some local citizens claim their city is now safer than London, and though the variegat- ed strollers along the Queen Eliz- abeth Way no longer bother more than a glance as the Striking Force rolls by, milady's handbag continues to appear suspiciously heavy, and a black holster peek- ing out from under a blue blazer remains the accepted fashion. DAILY PHOTO- F EATURE STORY and PHOTOS by SID KLAUS THE AREA'S INHABITANTS ARE MADE TO SQUAT AS OTHERS ARE ROUNDED UP. STRIKING FORCE COMMANDER DERIC SEARLE LEADS HIS MEN AFTER A FLEEING MAU MAU I L- I I i #t. Get along with... / ED CD a -EL- Y s 't ! } fi4 ( f ti (1 t . :' ; / 1 ; f!'' F 1 . 1 _ , . .r "r. # r it ' , ,> r 5 ;:.. The soft, yet sturdy... smooth, smooth shoes of DOGEY leather. A fashion highlight of the Fall Season. SUSPECT MAU MAUS ARE HELD FOR QUESTIONING A THOROUGH SEARCH A LOYAL KIKUYU SHOWS INSPECTOR ROBERT FORBES HIS IDENTIFICATION. $10.95 and $12.95 .o4 ~( 8a~, '~ ________________________ __________________________________________________