PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1967 PAETOTEMCIGNDIYSTRAY AUR ,16 Nurses Diversify A Raisin in the Sun' - Vivid Portrayal In Flexible Program Of Frustration in Negro Family Affairs By CATHY PERMUT Try catching one of those blue- striped coeds if you can, as she hurries acros the Fishbowl pursu- ing a few electives in her tight four-year-three-summer schedule toward a nursing career. She's part of a distinguished program with a different type of emphasis. Graduates leave the School of Nursing with a BS which says they know the theory behind the duties they perform and are qualified to do administrative work. In this, the School's policy is quite, in keping with the Uni- versity tradition, although it dif- fers considerably in length and depth from a program for Prac- tical Nurses. But these blue-swathed Florence Nightingales may also leave Ann Arbor as Registered Nurses whose Job includes observation, care and counel' of the ill and prevention of illness: Second-, third-, and fourth-year student nurses spend three to four months in each of six medical divisions, actually practicing their profession at var- ious city hospitals in obstetrics, pediatrics, psychiatry, junior and senior surgery,. and public health. Few undergraduates besides stu- dent teachers have any outside ex- perience in the world they are Pre- paring to enter. As the nurses go through the:; rotational periods they attend lec-' tures ranging from microbiology to pharmacology, and practice ses- sions in. nursing fundamentals. And their first-year requirements round out this education with courses in the humanities and so- cial sciences. In addition to its 750 undergraduates, the School offers graduate nursing degrees in Medical-Surgical and Psychiatric Nursing. The end of Nursing's Diamond Jubilee Celebration last summer saw the beginning in the Nursing School of steering committees. Student nurses, feeling that' they are just like other students, formed a 12-woman committee to advise the Nursing Student Coun- cil. They are attempting to help' nurses understand their roles and to consider their complaints and concerns.' The Steering Committee has arranged informal coffee-hour and discussions with Dean Rhoda Russell. Their main plans involve evaluation of the rotational period and an LSA academic card file to keep nurses up-to-date on var- ious elective courses and instruc- tors. In keeping with their distin- guished program at the University and their distinctive service to the. community, one local project of the Washtenaw Student Nurses Association is regular baby-sitting for retarded children in the county. One volunteer feels their contribution is the help and con- fidence nursing sitters gave to parents with such problems. Which is just one more reason to follow that girl in blue. tI By ANNE RICHMOND Editor of Generation Many of us are familiar with Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin In the Sun." Set on Chicago's south side, the story concerns a Negro family that has, as one of its members says, "acute ghetto- itis." The play is about the frus- trations of the American Negro, but it is not a polemic. It is about the tenderness and the bitterness that exists between people who love each other, but it is not senti- mental. In the hands of the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre, presented in Lydia Mendelssohn this weekend, it is simple and warm and quite wonderful. The key to the success of this production is realism.. From the moment the curtain rises on the set, we are given a direct and un- clouded view into the life of the Younger family. The director, Priscilla Travis, inserts little real- istic details; a window is opened, light floods the room; a character munches on toast. Often these touches slow the pace; the pauses they create are long and the tem- po seems to lag. The acting itself is sincere and honest, and, aside from a great deal of opening night jitters, quite competent. Singer Buchanan un- doubtedly heads the cast as ;the explosive and restless brother. His voice and his physical character- ization are strong and assured and his moments of humor are as ef- fective as his moments of fury. Melinda Willis, though not as competent technically, plays a gentle and warm wife. Unfortu- nately, her chronic tiredness some- times, in Miss Willis's interpreta- tion, turns into neuroticism and excessive emphasis on despair blurs for us her unflagging devo- tion to the family. Lois Owens, as the headstrong sister, Beneatha, has created a humorous and relaxed character that pleases the audience greatly. Julia Moore, as the dignified and grand Mama, is strong though technically imperfect. Her mo- ments of intensity, when over- acting could have been dangerous, are quiet and underplayed, and we see ' strong sorrow when she in- vokes her husband, "Oh, Big Walter, is this the harvest of our days?" Among the minor characters, Joseph Medrano as the white man designated to keep the Younger family out of his neighborhood, deserves special mention. He re- mains at a sufficient distance from his character to be able to comment satirically on it, and the audience responds to his humor. In truth, the racial issue is not the theme of "A Raisin In the Sun." The play derives its pop- ularity from its presentation of a family that has it problems as well as its joys and whose members love and respect each other throughout. This is what is fine about the Civic Theatre's produc- tion, that it is simple and funda- mental, emphasizing people, not issues. No, it is not professional. But it is an evening of sincere and honest community theatre. Tonight is SOLD OUT, but TOMORROW NIGHT you and your date can see Ann Arbor Civic Theatre's A RAISIN IN THE SUN Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 7:00 p.m. $1.50 and $1.75 Box office (668-6300) open today 10 a.m to 8 p.m., 4' tomorrow noon to 7 p.m. r -I U THIS ONE IS TRULY DIFFERENT! presents a FREE JAZZ CONCERT Sunday, Jan. 8 ... 8 P. M. North Campus Commons Featuring U of M Jazz Quartet There isoa wide selection of films today, playing in theatres for the pleasure of the selective movie-goer. They cover the spectrum from' suspense to drama to comedy. But there is a unique motion picture that is different from all of these. It may be said that it is the only film of its kind. It is called "Mademoiselle." Certainly many films, have probed the mysterious psyche of woman, but this courageous picture reveals a shockingly different aspect of the female. Jean Genet's story shows what can happen to a" woman who is loveless. As the film plunges into the roots of her evil, it is unflinching and unspairing, with a realism no other motion picture has ever attempted. Jeanne Moreau magnifi- cently portrays this helpless woman who unleashes her frustra- tions in a turbulent night of live with an itinerant worker. Tony Richardson's direction is hailed as better than his widely ac- claimed "Tom Jones." See "Mademoiselle." You will never forget it. I I . .... n 4 Use. l: Daily Classified Ads, TONY MCADSONS rMAiJEMOISELE JEANNE 44 MOREAU " ADDED SPORTS A GO GO BUNGLED BUNGALOW PRESENTATIONS REMAINING PERFORMANCES TONIGHT and TOMORROW CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S THE GOLD RUSH S:00 &9:05 Architecture Aud. STILL ONLY 50c SECOND SEMESTER In Hitt Adtot-riu Note: All programs begin at 8:30 P.M. unless otherwise indicated. DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA.........2:30, Sunday, January 8 ROYAL WINNIPEG BALLET . .......... . .....Saturday, February 4 MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ... 2:30, Sunday, February 26 Stanislaw Skrowaczewski, Conductor JOSE GRECO DANCE COMPANY .............. Wednesday, March .8 SHIRLEY VERRETT, Mezzo-soprano...............Monday, March 13 STOCKHOLM UNIVERSITY CHORUS . .. . Thursday, April 6 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA...... . Saturday, April 8 Erich Leinsdorf, Conductor Tickets: $5.00--$4.50=' $4.00-$350-$2.50-$1.50 4 TODAY DIAL 8-6416 i Next! Claude Giroux Presents . . Grand Prize Winner '66 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL STARTS FRIDAY ! DEAN MARTIN in "MURDERERS ROW" A MAN AND A WOMAN I I 1' Ill She'S PIJBU.uNIT That's Penelope-the slick stick-up chick ...and she's leading the merriest men on the hottest chase from safe to sofa. l.- A special U of MASesquicentennial event ARTUR RUBINSTEIN ........2:30, SUNDAY, MARCH 5 Tickets: $5.00-$4.50-$3.00--$2.50-$1.50 On sale beginning Monday, January 9 I __ E CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL in Rackham Auditorium BORODIN QUARTET (from Moscow).........8:30, Friday, February; STOCKHOLM KYNDEL STRING QUARTET .. 8:30, Saturday, February TRIO ITA LIANO d'ARCH I. .. .. ... .. .. .. . .2:30, Sunday, February Series Tickets: $8.00-$6.00-$5.00. Single Concerts: $4.00-$3.00-$2.00 ANN ARBOR MAY FESTIVAL APRIL 22,23,24,25,1967-5 Concerts in Hill Auditorium PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA AT ALL CONCERTS SATURDAY, APRIL 22,8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor. GALINA VISHNEVSKAYA, Russian soprano. Arias to be announced. "London" Symphony (Haydn) ; and Concerto for Orchestra (Bartok). SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 2:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor. MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH, Cellist, in Dvorak Concerto. Vivaldi "Magnificat" with University Choral Union; VERONICA TYLER, Soprano,.and MILDRED MILLER, Contralto. Also, Choral Union in world premiere of "The Martyr's Elegy" (Finney), with WALDIE ANDERSON, Tenor, SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 8:30 17 18 19 11 Phone 482-2056 EntAm, Oa CARPENTER ROACD NOW SHOWING. OPEN 6:30 P.M. -FREE HEATERS-- Shown at 7:05 & 11:50 on No GNE. CAS.R 4 ALSO . .. ~ 9 * * 4 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor. VAN CLIBURN, Pianist. in Brahms Concerto No. 2; "Haffner" Symphony (Mozart); New England Triptych (Schumann) ; Suite No. 2 from "Daphnis and Chloe" (Ravel). MONDAY, APRIL 24,8:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor. Verdi "Monzoni" Requiem with University Choral Union; GALINA VISHNEVSKAYA; MILDRED MILLER; GIUSEPPI CAMPORA, Tenor; and EZIO FLAGELLO, Bass. I +rtic~cn vaW.7 u3rT '2K O.±)d peneope....the world's most beautiful bank-robber to-starring q _. ....., .§ , 1 ...re. in Ph namkidn'E9%; I I