Sunday mogczrne Page Three inside: page four - books page 5-perspective February 15, 1976 Number 17 . .. FEATURES Martha Cook through the ages: Times don't By SARA RIMER IT WAS 1935 in Ann Arbor. Mari- juana was unheard of. Team captain Jerry Ford's leather-hel- meted Wolverines had a losing football season. On the campus, badminton was the rage. The rules at the Martha Cook dormitory were straight as a ram- rod. And so were the women-most of the time. They all studied hard enough to make honors grades, dressed formally in long dresses for dinners, and expected their dates to call them a week in advance. It was strictly forbidden to eat the salad before the main course. When Gertrude Veneklasen, of Grand Rapids, wanted to go off to the Naval Academy for a weekend function, the dorm required writ- ten permission from her parents. Veneklasen, now Gertrude Hueb- ner, a retired Regent from Bloom- field Hills, comes back every year to meet the new Martha Cook wo- men, nicknamed Martha Cookies. She finds the rules looser and the women freer, but the atmosphere is still strong in tradition and grace. Huebner remember the women's behavior in 1935 as-dignified. "We wore hats a lot," she recalls. And although she preferred "engineer- ing students, even in those days," she says the women considered it great fun to hang out the dorm's French windows and wave at the law students who lived in the dorm across the street. The building di- rector, however, deemed it Improp- er behavior for young women. ON NOV. 25, 1935, the women breathlessly readied the dorm for open house, when those same law students were invited upstairs for their annual look at the wo- men's bedrooms. The doors to those rooms were left open. The event was recorded in the 1935 yearbook: "Clothes were pried out of corners. towels hung neatly on racks, and beds strewn artistically with dain- ty little pillows in order to impress the male eleient with the domes- tic attractiveness of Martha Cook women." On Feb. 14, 1935 tradition was shattered and for the first time a radio brought downstairs to the sedate Blue Room for dancing. The dorm was exactly what Uni- versity alumnus William Cook had in mind when he donated it in 1916 as a place where "the charm and grace and principles of cul- tured A m e r i c a n womanhood" would be developed. He named the hange so building, with its Gothic arches As the and turrets, after his mother Mar- without tha Cook. , males, When Huebner's niece began col- itself a lege at the University a couple Vault. years ago, her aunt thought back "The to the good times at Martha Cook in 1935 and assumed her niece would live Vault," in that dorm, too. Huebner gave Butt her niece a tour that began down halls in the long, vaulted hallway with the women marble Venus di Milo-a replica undeser of the statue in the Louvre - pois- somei ed at the far end. dorm v They wandered through the junior. plush main floor living rooms and ing the dining room; their voices rebound- Is NotI ed from the carved ceilings like ed on r voices in a church. Their footsteps Assist were muffled in thick carpets and Loving, brocaded chairs. In one room, wo- men h men played Cook's own Steinway night ir piano with in inlaid Italian Renais- smuggle sance walnut case, outside women HUEBNER'S NIECE was unmoved. night, t "I'd just as soon live in a mu- creetly, seum," she said, and went off to junior.I live in a sorority. o rcaught Change has come slowly to Mar- student tha Cook. On a campus where re- possible volution was the cry just six years possible ago, and in a town dubbed "Dope Beca Capital of the Midwest," Martha rate fro Cook stands apart and whispers of ing, its the past.Govern As a :reult, Cookies often feel of Rege compelleto defend their decision wor M to live in te elegant building, and ionkto vehemently deny that they are pampered, sheltered princesses. WOME They are quick to point out that Coo some of the more time-worn tradi- tions have been discarded over the years. And it is quite true that Martha Cook is changing ,although in gradual, dignified manner. The law students are still study- ing in the quad - also donated by Cook - across the street, but it's not considered improper or even very much fun to wave at them. Some women admit they don't bother to close their curtains when some future lawyers put down their books and pick up binoculars to in- vestigate through Martha Cook's bedroom windows. A FUL The Blue Room has been redeco- inat rated in sunny colors and renamed periousl; the Gold Room, swallow The salad can be eaten before, Two lon during, or after the main course. of the r the size RUT ONE THING hasn't changed in anot since Huebner's sheltered years in yellowc Martha Cook. Men are not allow- m u s i ed to spend the night - ever. And phones, during the week they are limited glockens to the main floor rooms except for German 7-11 p.m. on Thursday evenings. The fast only .dorm left on campus 24 hour visitation for Martha Cook has earned nickname - the Virgin way tney used to guard us, , it certainly was a Virgin Huebner laughs. today, no one patrols the search of males, and the think their reputation is ved. "There certainly are unvirgins here," declares ice president Elise Bates, a On a recent tour of build- re were several "Virginity Incurable" stickers display- oom doors. ant resident director Linda 23, says she is aware that ave occasionally spent the nside the building and been ed down the elevator and the next morning. But if do have men spend the ;hey arrange their visits dis- says Rossanna Moitu, a If they don't, and they are by Loving or building direc- ve Chernow, they face a judiciary committee and expulsion. , se Martha Cook is sepa- m regular University hous- policy is set by a Board of ors appointed by the Board nts. The Governors are for- artha Cook residents who maintain the dorm's tradi- N WHO APPLY to Martha k are interviewed by Cher- Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Martha Cookies enjoying an afternoon tea now. The interview, unique among University dorms, is important so that women understand Cook is the most traditional and conser- vative dorm on campus, says Cher- now. Chernow says there are usually about 50 women on the waiting list. There is space for 153 in the dorm. Why do women continue to choose the most traditional and conservative dorm on campus-the only one with rules, maid service, dinners served by student waitress- es, and Friday afternoon teas? "It's more civilized than other dorms," says Jean Coulter, a for- mer Markley resident. Dorm president Jeannell Mansur says the dorm is preferred by par- ents. Often, other students want to know if Cookies are all rich, pam- pered ,and stuck up. Martha Cook is the only dorm left on campus that serves break- fast daily. Eggs benedict, quiche lorraine, and cheese souffle are al- ternated for Sunday brunch. Although the dorm offers 21 meals a week compared to 13 in the other dorms and has maid and lin- en service, its rates are not higher. Chernow says the dorm is oper- ated on room and board revenue. But a Building Reserve Fund has been built up over the years, and there are generous alumnae gifts. THE WOMEN are from all income levels, says Loving. She says many work at part-time jobs and several are in the dorm on schol- arship. The maid service just makes going to school a little eas- ier, says Loving, herself a gradu- ate student in Public Health. Loving says the women, far from being snobbish, are more fun-lov- ing than ever. Last year one came to her own 21st birthday party in See MARTHA, Page 5 Sara tor of Simer is a former executive edi- The Daily. Music therapy bid unique bridge, ir reaching the men tally disturbed By JIM BROZO tuckeda for late Rather,3 in the C pital. "TI look lik staffer J have se with." She a as musi dren's h learning sing alo -is a re treatmer turbed. Across phychiar apy has niche. " of music treatmen people w al proble tekop, a L-SIZE GRAND piano dom- tes the room. Sitting im- y in one corner, it seems to up nearly half the floor. g tables occupy the center room, which is only about of a two-car garage. Off .her corner are two garish cabinets filled with shiny c a 1 instruments - xylo- metallophones, and a spiel - all imported from y. windowless chamber isn't away in the Music School night practice sessions. it's got a prominent place .hildren's Psychiatric Hos- Phis room probably doesn't ke a lot," says .hospital o Pickett. "But you should en what we started out nd Charlie Whiting work c therapists at the chil- hospital. Music therapy- to play instruments and ng while others perform elatively new facet in the nt of the mentally dis- the street at the Neuro- ric Institute, music ther- also found an important Music therapy is the use c activity as a tool in the nt of and rehabilitation of rith physical and emotion- ims," explains Roger Smel- soft - snoken registered guitar or another musical instru- ment. Of course, developing concert- perfect harmony isn't the main purpose behind the music therapy. "It requires give and take, cooper- ation, and an awareness of others," says the calm, casual Smeltekop, who usually wears brightly colored sweatshirts and corduroy pants to work. "A musical skill can be per- sonally gratifying as a social skill. It gives patients more confidence in themselves" - which is the key to music therapy. Although music therapy is not a cure-all in itself, more than a third of NPI's patients participate in the program. And those people involved cover a wide range of ages and backgrounds - some are as young as four, while others are well into middle age. "As a tool for dealing with the short attention span of youngsters, music is quite good," says Whiting. See MUSIC, Page 4 4 Many techniques of German composer Carl Orff, author of a five - volume work entitled Music for Children, are used at CPH. Orff stresses that one need not under- stand such things as music nota- tion to appreciate the joy of melo- dy, harmony, and even dance. Thus, musical abiliy is hardly the cutting edge in deciding who would :". , ' "~ : s:;S,.;'::: ;: '4SFS?,: :": :,rs ?"j:;?.;: : +5;irr; rSA: rnrrr.!, :. ....: .dr., : .-: i::::: :iS ::::;>:::;._::::: _:::;::: x'.:: r..:;: _ :::::.is4_::isau::arta:;3so->Rbet'aceabN .A'' .. .......... .........::: :.:::::::,.? .-. .........