Page 8-Thursday, May 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily Looney cycle: fan'ifu vehicle to nowhere By DOUGLAS HELLER The Exploratory Moon-Probe Luna- cycle, a piece of art created by British artist Rowland Emett, has travelled around the globe and now come to tem- porary rest at Briarwood Mall. The Lunacycle, nick named "Maud" (Manually Activated Universal Deviator), is the realization of a whim- sical dream. Ostensibly designed to traverse the terrain of the moon, it's basically a bicycle frame that's been highly modified. EMMETT OBVIOUSLY put a lot of thought, care, love, and humor into making this contraption, and the end product is sheer beauty. And though it is neither functional nor practical, it's nonetheless fascinating to watch: assorted wheels spin, bells clang, motors whirr, lights flash, and gizmos twirl. In the past, Emett designed eight animated machines for the 1968 United Artists movie, "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang," and has several. works on exhibit in various locations, including the Chicago Museum of Science and In- dustry and the Ontario Science Center in Toronto. Last December, he was honored by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace with the presen- tation of the Order of the British Em- pire. The Lunacvcle, purchased in early 1978 by the Taubman Company, manages to poke gentle fun at science and gadgetry, remaining an object of amusement. The knick-knacks adorning the Lunacycle are a mixture of history and society: a bit of white lace over the windshield, a mosaic of shaped colored plexiglass, batteries, bicycle pumps, chrome stars, victorian lamps, kitchen colanders and much more. A small brush sweeps into a dustbin at the front of the vehicle, complete with a little lamp and waving British flag. THE DUMMY astronaut, sitting behind a velvet rope with a "shut the door" sign, is appropriately English- looking. Made of tacky pleated vinyl, the astronaut is almost as thin as the bicycle frame itself, and sports a bushy mustache, long neck, pointed nose, glasses, and a colander over its head. Tucked under his red velvet seat pad are a teapot and fancy mason jars with rock samples. Maud is so unique that Briarwood passersby can't help but pause for closer inspection. Children gather, gawk and point, and cry out in wonder. "Neat!" exclaimed one youngster. "Look at the light! Wow!" But the con- taption manages to appeal to all ages. The Lunacycle will be on display in the Grand Court at Briarwood through May 22. Lunacycle Affirmative action lauded at NOW meeting By ELISA ISAACSON for Women (NOW), used the Alan California State Supreme Court on the whites with higher test scores. Many medical schools around the Bakke case as the basis for her speech. grounds of "reverse discrimination." King said the tests used to judge country use admissions criteria which .THE U:S. SUPREME Court is ex- The California court ruled in favor of medical school applicants often only do not adequately measure relevant pected to hand down its decision in Bakke, declaring affirmative action measure the ability to do analysis and characteristics of potential doctors, that case in the near future. Bakke is a unconstitutional. research. She said a successful doctor lawyer Jean King said Tuesday night. 37-year-old white engineer who was must have qualities such as compassion King, addressing the May meeting of denied admission to the University of King offered two responses to the and sensitivity, which cannot be the Ann Arbor-Washtenaw County California at Davis' medical school and argument often used in support of measured by a test. Chapter of the National Organization has appealed his rejection to the Bakke that Davis' policy of reserving 16 KING ALSO cited various studies per cent of the medical school's spaces that show a negative correlation bet- for "disadvantaged" applicants allows ween the Medical College Achievement "underqualified" minorities to be ad- Test (MCAT) scores and performance mitted into the school, rather than See NOW, Page9 'U' Awareness program expected to (Continued from Page 3) President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro and a Regent sit down with a dozen or so community leaders and politic for the University. "Michigan Awareness" is primarily funded by gifts. "We haven't gone out and added a big staff or publication fees," Kennedy said. "We've been redirecting resources, using staff people and facilities from the office of State Relations." raise funds Kennedy said students can play a role in spreading the word about the University, and improving its image. "At this institution we have seen a per- centage of our education budget drop from money coming from the state, and increase in tuition and fees. "That's a significant shift, and it's one of the problems we're trying to combat-that tendency to rely on students rather than the state." IN PAPERBACK AT LAST! CARL SAGAN'S The Dragons of Eden "A history of the human brain from the Big Bang, 15 billion years ago, to the day before yesterday....It is a delight!" -NewYorkTimes ,,,. Ballantine Books a Mixed League Bowling SIGN UP NOW MICHIGAN UNION LANES Wednesday Night-50C per game OPEN 11 AM Mon-Fri, 1 PM Sat and Sun