THE ?MICHIGAN DAILY ODETTA COMMENTS: College Interest Aids Folk Music's Growth By THOMAS TURNER Friday and Saturday, Odetta kept The field :of folk music is grow- very busy. ing, Odetta said, and the interest Entertains Children shown on college campuses is a Yesterday she took her guitar prime factor. to the childrens psychiatric hos- Odetta, the energetic Alabama- pital for a half hour performance born folksinger, was in Ann Arbor for the patients. In the afternoon for her concert Friday night. she watched the football game. Speaking over a cup of coffee at "I've become interested in foot- the Union, she outlined differ- ball all of a sudden," Odetta ad- ences between the folk-music field mitted. "When I was in Toronto, I and what she calls the "glamour rooted for their team and they and glitter show-business."' In different cities, Odetta said, there are clubs or restaurants where show-people get together in "fraternity atmosphere. "They" sit around," she explained,. "talk-f ing about who's doing what, who's wearing what. It's all pretty shal- low." N 'U' Studies Rehabilitation Of State's Elderly Patients 11 If a new University .research project proves successful, elderly patients in countyhmedical care facilities will soon have a chance to get about more on their own. Conducted by the University Division of Gerontology, in colla- boration with the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilita- tion of the medical school, the project is designed to show what comprehensive rehabilitative care can do for patients over 45 years old. "Each year, growing numbers of disabled and chronically ill older people are being admitted to our public and private nursing homes where, for the most part, they are needlessly relegated to the hopeless status of increasing physical, psy- chological, and financial depend- ency," explained project co-direcc- tors Wilma Donahue; chairman of the Division of Gerontology and Dr. Janies Rae, chairman of the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Includes Paid Work Scheduled to run 18 months, the project includes several major phases. A one-week training in- stitute will take place for staff members and public officials of the county facilities. Consultation by a team, of ex- perts will help each facility estab- lish its own rehabilitation pro- gram. There will be inauguration of paid work opportunities for patients in each facility. Physical, psychological and vo- cational status of patients in each institution before and after the program will be assessed, and com- parison of these data with results at a matched group of facilities having no rehabilitation programs will be compiled. Plan Consultations Finally, there will be consulta- tion with the communities con-1 cerned to help them provide for rehabilitated patients who are dis- charged from the facilities. Experiments elsewhere have shown that up to one fourth the patients in county medical fa- cilities may be discharged to their homes, often with jobs in their community, following such a pro- gram. Costs for a continuing re- habilitative program can run as low as $.50 a patient per day. "If the tide of mounting num- bers of chronically ill and disabled older people is to be stemmed, comprehensive programs of re- habilitation must become common knowledge and practice," Mrs. Donahue explains. Financed by a grant of $39,000 from the United States Office of Vocational Rehabilitation, the new project will be conducted first in the Jackson County Medical Care Facility. i i ,: t ' : .,. e 4 DAYS ifO )O wish to s Personalized CHRISTMAS CARDS from, THE LARGEST COLLECTION OF UNUSUAL. CARDS IN ANN ARBOR at CHESTER ROBERTS GIFTS SShopping Days 312 S. Stat -Daily-Ronald Sossi CTICE-Rehearsal for "Kiss Me Kate," this year's on, is well under way. Dancers spend at least five polishing their eight numbers in preparation for 1i. P Performers Show 'usiasm for Production 4.> y LANE VANDERSLICE sket is going great guns. husiasm and satisfaction .ts progress is evident as the rs whistle the show tunes they have gone through their es. The general chairman oq-chairmen sit on the stage Union ballroom with satis- miles on their faces. s going so well," everyone and they say it almost con- y-to each other and to the er that wanders into re- al. It is going well. According in Moore, '58, Musket Gen- hairman, the.show is a week r along than last year. Ahead of Schedule don't think we started the :d act before Thanksgiving ear," said Sandra Sol, '58, way ahead of last year." e've got three whole weeks," McRitchie, '59, said, as if he n't quite believe it. Musket 'Kiss Me Kate," opens Dec. ording to the rehearsal ule, no cast member prac- less than three times a week. ancers, with eight important ers, rehearse five or six, and eryoige, the rehearsal sched- lay be increased in the re- ng weeks. Fveryone Happy ryone, from Moore to one of 'reshmen on the show, is- about everything. Dude nson, the director? ,"Great,"] derful to work for," "Couldn't' be better." The show itself? Cast members are still whistling the songs and laughing at the jokes after six weeks, a sign that they think it will be more- than just' "Another Opening, Another- Show," the' opening song in "Kiss Me 'Kate." And everyone: feels the same way about the other people re- sponsible for the musical. LouAnn Rosengarten, '59, the choreo'gra- pher and Don Young, Spec., chorus director, come in for special men- tion by Musket members. Probably the project that excites the most interest around the Mus- ket office is the premiere planned for Dec. 11. The two big problems now are obtaining spotlights and a red carpet, but the officers ex- pect 'that these will be solved in time for opening night. TV Show Studies 'Why People Write' Four writers will explore reasons: why people write, on the Univer- sity's television series, "Close-up," tomorrow at 8 p.m. on WPAG-TV, Channel 20 in Ann Arbor. Nancy Willard, '58, an award winner in the 1957 Hopwood Award Contest, William Dawson, a local resident who is a profes- sional writer, Mrs. William Hurtu. bise, housewife, and Mrs. Lawrence Steiner, wife of a University stu - dent, will discuss the topic. Folk Music Grapevine Folk music, she said in-contrast, has a grapevine and when a singer visits a city he "bunks" in some- one's house-on the floor or in a bed. All the folksingers present, she continued, sing together and ar-1 gue. "We call it discussing," she interjected by way of explanation. Therefore, she concluded, the "fraternity"' of folk singers is deeper by' nature. The same type of contrast cane be seen, Odetta continued, when comparing The Gate of Horn, folk music night club in Chicago, with any other club featuring a folk singer on its bill. Discusses Night Clubs "The regular night club might have a folk singer, a chanteuse, a small combo and a comedian. Some of the audience would have come to see each one. They'd talk while the others were on. "In a regular night club," she said, "a folk singer has to change his delivery from night to night to fit audience mood." At The Gate of Horn, the only all-folk music club in the country, members of the audience may have come to hear one or another of the performers, Odetta admitted, but the atmosphere is much closer to the attentiveness of the concert stage. Enjoys'Student Audiences Student audiences, 'the blues singer said, are enjoyed by per- formers because they are so alive. 'If they like you," she continued, "it stimulates, you.") Ocdetta singled out two college concerts that stand out in her mind. One was at Princeton, the other here at the University during last summer's National Student Association meeting. During each, she said, there was such an ovation she had to "fight back the tears." While in Ann Arbor this past SODETTA visiting folksinger won. When I visited Yale they won. When I visited Cleveland, I didn't even have to watch the game for them to win. "I'm becoming a powerful force," she said- before the game yester- day. Wants to Travel For the future, Odetta outlined plans for obtaining a scholarship to do folk song research abroad. "I'd like to go to various coun- tries and stay long enough to learn the language," she explained. "I'd collect songs and put them in digest form, lullabies of. each country, for example. "I'd give the collections to boards of education to use with grade-school children. A lot of fear is due to unfamiliarity." "Soap-box" activity of this sort, Odetta said, won't come for "a little while yet, though." She flew to Chicago after the football game for a concert. v a.YGALA HATS EAC opE JALIaY EACH ONE A BEAUTY! DEADES BEAVERS and SATINS, White and Pastels . . . from 8.95 Little VELVET and FEATHER HEAD BANDS and HALF HATS*. . . from 4.00 Ear Warming Loveliness Warm Wool Jerseys with nylon lisle lining in Grey, Red and Black C' - This Is Ann MMUWMNM" Colin S Shop STATE and LIBERTY Ap l :AA ' (~r ,S K\ N 4 t C at-: r moo. 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Harper's Bazaar I 1fy7J \f 4j5J j.- r . k~p For the Sake of Glamour rs . $1 Wikel-Schurz Drugs is opening the LARGEST f SIT-DOWN COSMETIC COUNTER I Red roses richly pofferned on a black printed silk - by Stafford Printers. Also in tones of blue, green roses. Sizes 8 to 18. V/ I1! For the holidays, . slim in Ann Arbor- Onondaga rayon crepe sheath with fluid, flat- I. ( .i# nr rrn nr +ka ] C, cirti* r cin Amblft;-+^C0AM rnr% t /r ILAIII M ftnl a ktrir r-n rnetfirc