THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'S AND LETTERS: Painter Blends Art, Domes By DAVID MARCUS itings on the surfaces of ic domes represent a trend d the integration of art and nment, Prof. Geroie Kam- i of the Architecture and i . school, said. ired by the work of R. Buck- er Fuller,. Prof. Kamrowski as an exhibition of his work ese fabricated metal domes University Art Museum and ne at a New York gallery last . Fuller has initiated work nilar projects. "There has been very little col- laboration between modern art and modern architecture," Pros. Kamrowski asserted. "There is a movement now to- ward environmental art. People have come to learn that you can live with modern art; there is no need to be remote from it. "They've seen possibilities in such things as the way they .use screens in the Orient." Dome as Art. Commenting on his use of the dome as an artistic medium, Prof. Kamrowski said, "A dome offers so much of an artistic possibility because of the tremendous amount of open space. "Some of the domes can cover a sports stadium., "Also, the dome is really some- thing of a spiritual and a univer- sal form. St. Paul's in London is one; St. 'Peter's in Rome is one; the Taj Mahal is one. In India, some caves have been carved into the shape of domes. "Today, a ceiling is simply a bar- rier between two social strata. A dome could be used in modern architecture in bedrooms perhaps or as a room for meditation." Integration Fails Noting the failure of such in- tegration he said, "A lot of people didn't want to take the chance and others were simply unaware of the possibilities. "Today, a number of corpora- tions and banks are incorporating a lot of art into their modern buildings. Business, especially in New York, has to a degree accepted art as a part of their environ- ment." He also noted the growing ac- ceptance of new art forms. "When the first mobile came out, people asked 'what do you do with them?' Mobiles Common "Today, these mobiles are com- mon. You see them in stores and homes. There was once a rule against putting nails in ceilings that ob- structed their acceptance. "But, if mobiles are now accepted, why not hang paintings or a piece of sculpture or a dome from the ceiling?" Prof. Kamrowski also cited the recent development of walk- through sculpture. Hylozoist Work His own work in the geodesic domes realizes a concept of art Prof. Kamrowski terms "hylozo- ist." This utilizes very heavy tex- tures and materials such as re- flecting beads, crushedstone, mar- ble 'and sand designed to allow, light to play upon the surface in a certain manner. Most of the paintings are in the forms of triangular panels. Prof. Kamrowski noted that his New York exhibition received great enthusiasm from visiting Europeans, and foresaw a possi- bility of the show touring Europe in the coming year. PUBLIC HEALTH: Split Units Of ,School Pro grain Former Metropolitan Opera so- prano Prof. Frances Greer of the music school will make her local debut as a soloist with the Ann' Arbor Civic Symphony Orchestra at 4 p.m. today in the Ann Arbor High School Aud. In the fourth concert of the current season Conductor George C. Wilson will present Mendels- sohn's "Overture to Fingal's Cave," Mozart's "Symphony No. 40 in G- 4 { n1 Notes France," at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. The program is the current of- fering in the Burton Holmes Travelogue Series. Tour Choir .. The Tour Choir of the Michigan Singers will open its spring tour at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the Central High School Auditorium in Bay City. Under the direction of Prof. Maynard Klein of the music school, the program will include Handel's "Who is Like Unto Thee, O God"; De la Rue's "O Salutarius Hostia"; Vecchi's "Sing, sing a song for me"; Certon's "IT cannot conceal it"; Gibbon's "The Silver Swan"; Gabrieli's "Joy fills my Heart"; Schubert's "Mass in G major" and J. S. Bach's "Praise ye the Lord" and "All that hath life, praise the Lord." The program will be concluded with a round of Michigan songs. Information .. . WUOM has begun a new series of 45 minute news and informa- tion programs presented from 5:15 to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. The package includes a 10-min- ute sportscast and 15 minutes of local, state, and national news fol- lowing 20 minutes of background and -interpretive programs. League Sets Senior Night' Festivities Seniors will "Ring in the New" at this year's annual Senior Night at 6 p.m. Thursday in the League. Ballroom, Sue Gaikema, '61Ed., chairman, said yesterday. To the tune of the Phi Gamma Delta band, Senior women will meet on the Diag at 5:30 p.m. and march to the League where they will be treated to steaks, entertainment and a special sneak preview of the Junior Girls' Play, "Teartsba." Songs from both the Maize and Blue Frosh Weekend productions, scenes from Soph Show "Any- thing Goes" and special numbers from last year's JGP will be fea- tured on the program. The traditional Declaration of Status ceremony will also be per- formed at this year's 'banquet-- the oldest University activity for women. According to the ritual, married women will blow out candles, en- gaged will suck lemons, "steadies" pull out corks and unattached women will throw as many pennies as their years of freedom into a wishing well. After the JGP performance, the seniors will sing an original song to the juniors as they "Ring in the New." THE MODERN JAZZ QUARTET has consistently won most of the world's jazz polls, among, them: Jazz Hot, Jazz Mag. (France) Musica Jazz (Italy) Melody Maker (England) New Zealand Jazz Journal Jazz Podium (Germany) Down Beat, Metronome, South African Broadcasting Co. Playboy (United States) MODERN JAZZ QUARTET Next Friday, March 24, 8:30 P.M. Tickets $1.50, 2.25, 2.75, 3.25, 3.50 on sale at DISC SHOP, 1210 So. University and HI FI and TV CENTER, 304 So. Thayer 44 TONIGHT at 7 and D ickens. 4 The Pickwick Papers with James Flayter, James Donald, Nigel Bruce, Hermione Gingold, Joyce Grenfell, Donald Wolfit Short: CUCKOO WALTZ ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORI UM 50c'4 -Daily-Jerome Starr GEODESIC ART--Prof. Gerome Kamrowski looks at some of the triangular panel pantings he has created in an attempt to inte- grate art and architecture. regents Grant Sabaias -onsiderother Requests The Regents Friday granted sab-. atical leaves to several professors Z the social work school. Prof. Eleanor G. Cranefleld was ranted leave for the first semester f 1961-62. She plans to develop a llabus for courses in casework eld instruction. Prof. Ralph C. Fletcher was also ranted leave for that semester. e will study the residential treat- ent of children with mental ill- ess in England. Prof. Clarice Freud received ave of absence for' the second ?mester of 1961-62. She will work' n the extent to which social case-. ork practitioners can be helped y their supervisors to transfer nowledge of general social case- ,ork concepts and principles from ne kind of child welfare case to her kinds ,of cases in the same elds of practice.' Also, several members of the berary college faculty have sub- dtted requests for sabbatical aves to the Board of Regents. Prof. Daniel B. Suits of the eco- omics department, Prof. Ray- Lond L. Kilgour of the library sci- nee department and Prof. Fred- rick E. Smith of the zoology de- artment have requested leave for he coming fall semester. Prof. William Haber and Prof. hlorey Peterson of the economics, apartment, Prof. Edwin A. Engel nd Prof. Frank L. Huntley of the nglish department, Prof. Lionel aing of the political science de- artment, Prof. Werner S. Lan- ecker of the sociology,'depart- lent, Edward Stasheff of the eech department and Prof. Karl . Guthe of the zoology depart- lent have asked for leave during he coming spring semester. The following professors have equested leave for the academic ear 1961-62: Prof. Warren H. GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY THE TOLL GATE (William S. Hart, U.S.A., 1920) andK HIS BITTER PILL (Prod. by Mack Sennett,;" U.S.A., 1916) Rackham Amphitheatre, Monday, March 20, 8 p.m. Admission is solely by subscription. A subscrip- tion to the four remaining pro- grams of the seriescosts'$2.00. For further' information, call NO 2-6685 or NO 2-9359, Wagner of the botany department,' Prof. Peter A. Smith of the chem- istry department, Prof. Frederick S. Turneaure of the geology de- partment, Prof. Wilfred Kaplan and Prof. James G. Wendel of the mathematics department, Prof.. Charles L. Stevenson of the philos- ophy department. Also asking leaves are Prof. Henry L. Bretton and Prof. James H. Meisel of the political science department, Prof. J. David Birch, Prof. E. Lowell Kelly, and' Prof. Elton B. McNeil of the psychology. department, Prof. E. B..Ham and Prof. Robert L. Politzer of ro- mance languages department, Prof. Horace M. Miner of the soci- ology .department, and Prof. Gor- don E. Peterson of the speech department. PROF. FRANCES GREER 1 . ex-Met soprano1 minor," Ravel's "Scheherazade" and Moussorgsky-Rimskey-Kor- sakov's concert fantasy, the eerie "Night on Bald Mountain." Violinist .. . The Extra Concert Series will present famed violinist Zino ran- cescatti at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Francescatti will play three numbers during the first half of the program: "Sonata No. 1" by Handel; Andante and Allegro from "Sonata in A minor" by Bach and "Sonata, Opus 94 bis" by Proko- fleff. After the intermission the pro- gram will include "Duo Concer- tante" by Stravinsky and "I Pal- piti" by Paganini. Travelogue . . Robert Mallet will present the film "Enchanting Byways of Heating Plant To Buy Boiler Addition of a new $2 million gas-fired boiler for the heating plant was approved by the Regents yesterday, despite the warning by Regent Donald Thurber of De- troit, that this "make-shift solu- tion" was not the best long-range course of action. Thurber charged that within 30 years the University would have "a completely obsolete heating plant" all at once. He said the best solution would be the construction of a new plant less centrally located than the present Washington St. building, but that state funds were not available for such a project. . Within a year, the Regents will compare operating costs of the new furnace and the two coal- fired boilers. Regents Name GeologyHead The Regents yesterday named Prof. Warren L. Smith of the economics department to the executive committee of the Michi- gan Memorial Phoenix Project for the period from March 1, 1961 to June 30, 1963. He wil complete the unexpired term of Prof. Wolfgang F. Stolper of the economices department who is on leave. More Freshmen Win Branstroms The office of scholarships has announced five additional fresh- men have won Bransrom prizes. The five are Barbara Christine King, Carol Lynne Porter, Susan Auleen Schoole, Jill Sherry Slater, and Vivian Joy Subarsky, all of the literary college. 3RD AND FINAL WEEK ! NOMINATED FOR FIVE ACADEMY AWARDS 1i"E HAPW STREET-WAKER Or P RAEuS... The ribald, impudent, but always moving account of the encounter between d gir-of- the-streets in a Grecian seaport town... and the American who wants to rescue her from her desperate (or is it?) situation.., MELINAMERcOURI I STARTING TODAY i n '" , 5-6290 DIAL 1 r . 4 rt P4atw'N= Ms t VIWA" Mnd Ojntt«i i r atom N l THE STARTLING STORY OF A HAND, PICKED SPY...TRAPPED INTO FIGHTING ,I U~cdl Set Challenge Precolloq num On Ideologites Challenge will present its fifth pre-colloquium program, "The Ideologic1 Struggle: Communism versue estern Democracy" at 2:30 p.m. today in Aud. B. Prof.. Richard, Park of the:poli- tical science department,*- Prof. Samuel Shapiro of the Michigan State University-Oakland history department and Alvin M. Bent- ley, former Unitied States repre- sentative from Michigan, will be the main speakers. Park recently attended a con- ference in New Delhi on "South and East Asia Take a Second Look atDemocracy." He is co-author of a report submitted to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, "United States Foreign Policy in .Asia." Shapiro his written articles for New Republic, The Reporter and the London Economist and is par- ticularly concerned with problems of Latin America, especially Cuba, The Regents Friday approved a division- of the present School of Public Health's department of public health practices into two departments to be known as com- munity health services and pub- lic health. Dr. Kenneth A. Easlick, of the Dental School and the public health school, has been appoint- ed chairman of the department of health development which will in- clude units on nutrition, dental, mental, maternal and child health arid" health education. Prof. Vlado A. Getting, acting chairman of the present depart- ment of public health practices, will be chairman of the new de- partment of community health services.. uskin Keynotes YDs Convention University Young Democrats are hosting a statewide YD convention to begin at 2:30 p.m. today in the Union. Alan Guskin, Grad, campus spokesman for Americans Com- mitted to World Responsibility, will deliver the keynote address on the proposed peace corps, to be followed by a general discus- sion of policy resolutions on the theme; "After victory, what?" The group will also elect new di- vision officers. Only the moti S- rd ion pictures can pre- I sent entertaiment sospectacular! Winner of a grand total of eleven Academy Awards including Beat Film of The Yearl 2 SHOWS DAI LY Doors Open at 1:00 P.M. and 7:00 P.M. Shows start at 1:30 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. Adults --- Weekday Matinees ............. 90c Adults - Evenings and Sunday ..........$1.25 Children under 12 years................. 50c eO1 Bradford OIILMAN !SPzyPARKER . HarryANDRENS, DIAL NO 2-6264 2ND BIG WEEK COMING TO OUR STAGE J8d ORECO and his Company of SPANISH .DANCERS I esn Singers and Musicians - MICHIGAN THEATRE 0with FLAMENCO MON., MAR 27th H.$0020GUITARISTS at 8:30 P.M. BAL. $3.00 - 2.00 and SINGERS 7, CHALLENGE } presents - - I PROF. RICHARD PARK PROF. SAMUEL SHAPIRO REP. ALVIN BENTLEY discusssing TCARTSBA MARCH 23, 5 q. n) L'Tj IA.%j V. OlV MARCH 23 I I ru~u. -hlff',IA~khW Alk "W AlA £1rEWE WA" WA IVU