. PAG" I TIE MICHIGAN DAILY FR MAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1947 PREFER A WOODEN SHACK? New Buildings Useful But Inartistic, Students Say By FRAN IVICK As the University's multi-mil- lion dollar building program' moves forward, students and fac- ulty of the art school look on in amazement. Observers are unanimous in their approval of the buildings as to their usefulness, but the design of the buildings has evoked min- gled sentiments. Compared to Shack When asked what he thought of the design of the General Service Building, one faculty member lik- ened its exterior to an ocean- liner. In partial defense of the Government In Air About WAA Balloons WASHINGTON, Sept. 25-(P)- Your government is up in the air today over balloons. The story starts off with the War Assets Administration. That's the outfit that tries to peddle war leftovers. Among the war leftovers were barrage balloons. Thousands of them. "We soon found out," Floyd Brinkley, WAA's big balloon man, explained, "That there isn't much of a- market for an old balloon." And then one day a WAA sales- man had an idea: Why not sell the balloons to people who could use them for advertising? The balloons, from 35 to 80 feet in length, could be moored over stores and used car lots from coast to coast. The WAA even sent up a bal- loon itself, to show how peachy the whole idea was. This led to three results: 1. Some congressmen com- plained they didn't like to see the balloon floating out there. It cut off their view of the Potomac. 2. A few balloons were sold, maybe as many as a hundred. 3. The balloon that WAA had sent up broke loose. It was result No. 3 that played hob with things. You'd be sur- prised how many folks don't like balloons wandering around aim- lessly. Airlines seemed especially sen- sitive.. The holler was so loud that the Civil Aeronautics Adminis- tration stepped in to announce in a formal order, it will take a special permit to operate a moored balloon. Closer than 500 feet to the base of a cloud.. If it's dark. When the ground visitbility is less than three miles. At an altitude of more than 500 feet. Within five miles of the nearest airport.. I don't suppose we'll ever sell another balloon for advertising purposes now," said' Brinkley. "What does a fellow who runs a used car lot know about ground visibility?" building, a student commented, "A wooden shack would be better than Angell Hall with its tremen- dous waste of space and build- ing material." One student was of the opinion that the student body as a whole thinks the General Service Build- ing looks like a factory merely be- cause they have seen factories built along similar lines. The same student said that the buildings possessed great incongruities indi- ;idually, with most of the build- :ngs containing examples of sev- ral different styles of architec- mure within themselves. More Student Opinion Many students of architecture were of the opinion that the build- ings were neither old nor mod- ern in their design, and the age ok the architecture employed in most of thernew structureswas placed at ten years. A great number of students in- terviewed expressed the hope that the finished buildings won't look like the sketches published in Tuesday's Daily. In spite of their split on design, however, the final judgement of all students interviewed was: the buildings have been designed, they're being built, and "we're grateful for any place in which to have classes." Blind Terrier To Undergo Eye Surgery DETROIT, Sept. 25-()-An almost totally blind dog was flown to Washington today to un- dergo surgery that may restore its eyesight. Topper, a seven-year-old wire haired terrier owned by John C. Bonning, is slated for admission to the Abbey Hospital for ani- mals. Bonning said it was uncertain whether cataracts would be re- moved from the dog's eyes or whether the cornea from the eye of another dog would be trans- planted to give Topper partial sight. Preliminary plans call for Top- per to have a two weeks' convales- cense at Washington before he comes back to his home. Three months later he will be returned to Washington for a similar op- eration on the other eye. Senior Picture DeadlineSet Campus Booths Will Handle Appointments All seniors graduating in Feb- ruary, June or August of 1948 should make their senior picture appointments for the Michigan- ensian before October 1, Buck Dawson, 'Ensian managing edi- tor, announced yesterday. Appointments may be made at any of the 'Ensian booths in the Michigan League, Michigan Un- ion, Law Quad, Engineering Arch and at the Willow Village Bus stop. Each senior will be charged a fee of $2 and will receive eight proofs from which to choose. Seniors and all other students may place orders for the 1948 yearbook at the picture booths, and may pay the full price of $5 or make a $1 down payment. Today is the last day that booths will be open in the Michi- gan Union and the Law Quad. Monday they will be' located in the Architecture School and on the corner of State Street and North University. Irwin Zucker Appointed Editor of Hillel News Irwin Zucker, '48, has been ap- pointed editor-in-chief of the Hil- lel News, Rabbi Herschel Lymon of the Hillel Foundation, an- nounced yesterday. Zucker, who will succeed Mir- iam Levy to the position, is a sports night editor on The Daily staff. Lecture eries Covers Wide TopicRange Noted Speakers in Many Fields Included Noted speakers in the field of drama, exploration, literature and government are included in the 106th annual Lecture Series spon- sored by the Oratorical Associa- tion, opening Oct. 23 in Hill Audi- torium. Walter Duranty and H.. R. Knickerbocker, Pulitzer Prize Journalists, will debate, "Can Rus- sia Be Part of One World?" during the first lecture. Duranty, author of several books on Russia, spent twenty years there as a foreign correspondent. World-Wide Reporter Knickerbocker, whom Alexander Woolcottcalled "The Richard Harding Davis of Our Times," has had 25 years of experience in re- porting world-shaking events in all parts of the globe. A gallery of portraits of the world's great actors and their styles of acting from Grecian times to the present, will be pre- sented by Jacques Cartier in "Theater Cavalcade," Nov. 3. Rear-Admiral Richard E. Byrd, explorer, will appear Nov. 20. He will narrate by means of motion pictures and story, his experiences on his many expeditions, includ- ing the North Pole and South Pole trips. Modern Theatre Talk Nov. 25, Jane Cowl, stage star, will present a lecture-recital of the modern theatre. Her charac- terizations will include perform- ances from "Within the Law," "Common Clay," "Easy Virtue," "Romeo and Juliet" "The Road to Rome," "Twelfth Night," "Rain from Heaven," "First Lady" and "Old Acquaintance." Julien Bryan, leading creator of documentary films of history in the making, will lecture here Jan. 13. A full-length color film of Russia t'oday, "Russia Revisited" will be presented during the pro- gram. Play Analyses "Broadway in Review," will be presented by John Mason Brown, Associate Editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, Jan. 22. His talk will ;include analyses of the latest plays. Concluding lecture will be given Feb. 10, when the Hon. Arthur Bliss Lane, U. S. Ambassador to Poland will appear. Former Chief of the Division of Mexican Af- -fairs in the State Department, Minister to Nicaragua and Costa Rica and Ambassador to Colom- bia, -Lane will discuss, "Our For- eign Policy-Right or Wrong?" . Tickets for the lecture course may be purchased from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. daily except Saturday afternoon and Sunday, at the Hill Auditorium Box Office. After Oct. 23, the box office will be open the day before, and day of each lecture for single admis- sion tickets. Bomber Fund Is Available Veterans Are Eligible For Scholarships Veterans may again take ad- vantage of a wartime campus's foresight by applying for Bomber Scholarships to be awarded for the third time this fall. Established in 1942, the Bomber Scholarship fund grew to a total of $25,000 in war bonds, with proceeds from every campus social event held during the war. Conceived by Art Rude '49, who headed the central committee sponsoring the campaign, the Bomber Scholarship was original- ly intended to aid University vet- erans whose education had been interrupted by the war. Addi- tional groups of veterans were made eligible for the scholarships by action of the Student Bomber Scholarship Committee last May. The scholarships are open to any undergraduate student who has had at least one year's serv- ice in the armed forces during the last war and who has completed the equivalent of two semesters of credit hours in the University. Application forms for the Bomber Scholarships are now available at the Scholarship Divi- sion of the Office of Student Af- fairs, Rm. 205 University Hall. l'C' liErIf A INFri / I1 N O N- O B J E C T I V E A R T-Mrs. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, (left) widow of the artist, and Hilla Rebay, curator of the Museum of Non-Objective Painting in New York, examine a painting in the Moholy-Nagy memorial exhibit at the museum. B 0 M B E D - 0 U T P A L A C E- Two years after the war's end, the Hungarian royal palaco on the Danube at Budapest still bears these scars from bombing attacks. - C E N E R A T I O N S O F B E A R D S -. Three generations of the- Bensley family-Lou, Loren and Jack-sport luxurious beards grown for the Traverse City, Mich., centennial celebration. LIFE... $4~. p4.25 Onstead oL5.5) TIME... *4.50 B E R L I N B U N K 9 R B L O W N U P - British troops, after days of preparation, blew up one of the two big air raid shelters near Berlin's Zoological Garden. Top: View of shelter just before the blast. Bottom: Shelter is engulfed in smoke as it is destroyed.. ACTR ESS-Pretty Patricia Alphin of the movies poses beside a country fence is _her new bathing suit.' i P R E T T Y-Barbara Bates, ilm actress, was chosen "Miss )electable of 1947" by group of ,_',western restaurant men. I nlL.Lnn~rLrt- L-IInr2U"T-ThUrLrULW TRYOUT MEETING FOR 'N M .: J j. I