PAGE SILL THE MICHIGAN DAILY BONES, LUNAR SURFACES, ARTIFACTS: UtJiiAXAUuU Museums Lure 100,000 Visitors a Year f Nearly 100,000 persons visited University museums last year to see exhibits ranging from ancient bones to a model of a large part of the moon's surface. For those who have never look- ed into the threatening jaws of a mastodon or a water shrew, the University Museum is the place to go. Occupying two floors and a balcony, the museum contains a variety of displays. The "Hall of Evolution," situ- ated on the second floor, presents the plants and animals of past geological eras. A skeleton of a "Duckbilled" dinosaur has a skull weighing 250 pounds and attracts quite a bit of attention. Preserved Mastodon A mastodon, the best preserved and most complete ever found in Michigan, sits wearily on its haunches waiting for visitors to come up to it on the second floor. Mounted proudly on the right wall is a pterodactyl, an extinct flying reptile, with a wing has -also done much work on a the first quarter of this century. span of almost 14 feet. new ecology exhibit. Between 1925 and 1936 two major On the balcony, there is a syn- Other Museums expeditions worked at Karanis in optic series of Michigan plants and The University Museum is not Egypt and Seleucia in Iraq. animals. the only one on campus which has The exhibit shows artifacts, Environmental influences af- public displays. photographs and models of these fecting the life and growth of The Kelsey Museum of Archae- expeditions. plants and animals are shown in ology contains an extensive col- 'U' Expedition the fourth floor displays. There lection from the Mediterranean Since the end of the war, an are also displays on anthropology, world and from the Near East. expedition from the museum has geology and astronomy along with Most of the relics on display are been working at St. Catherine's a planetarium. from expeditions run by the Uni- Monastery at Mt. Sinai in Egypt. New minerology displays have versity. Seven expeditions were The monastery, built around 550 been set up this year. The museum sponsored by the University in A.D. by the Emperor Justinian, is . . I WelclomAe! AllMichigan Students, ....4............ .... s...r:} ....... ....... :......n......... ... M O M.~ ,.... .. ........ ..... . ..,.... ..... ....... ....... 4:. ~:;..xh....... . . ...:;nw : -4':is {"}ri{:\ :'-::;::;_ .;::{. of particular importance because it houses the only known icons that survived the eighth and ninth century iconoclast heresy. The ex- pedition is involved in photo- graphic work which when develop- ed will be put on exhibition in Ann Arbor. During the past year, an ex- pedition from the University has been working in Egypt at Karanis. These expeditions supply the Kelsey Museum with its extensive displays. Jewelry, artwork, food- stuffs, coins, glass, pottery and writing materials can be found throughout the two floors of the museum, Art The University also has many displays of art which will greet new and returning students this fall. A large variety of periods and styles in art has been featured in both special displays and the permanent collection at the Uni- versity art museum. Its permanent collection con-t tains samples from Byzantine bronzework to the rich and de- tailed works of the Flemish mas- ters. Modern pieces such' as Pi-f casso's "Horse" and sculptures by Jean Arp 'are also a part of thel I collection. The University art collections began with former acting Presi- dent Harry S. Frieze, who served as curator of the collections untill his death in 1889. On a European trip he purchased a collection of 'U' Rents Prints For Room Use Prints of well-known paintings are available for student rooms. These prints are rented for fromt 25 cents to $1.25 each in the Stu-c dent Activities Bldg. Prints range from renaissance1 to abstract works. The service ist maintained, by the University. Itst original prints were donated to it, b'it now a special fund is used toc extend the rental collection, GRADUATE STUDENT LOUIS MICHEL works on a scale model of the surface of the moon. The model is part of the University Museum's permanent collection. engravings and photographs and The collection, housed on the strings that vibrate when other copies of classical sculpture to illu- second floor of Hill Aud., shows strings are played. strate his lectures on the Arts of Classical Antiquity. First donation The first important original work was donated to the Univer- sity by alumni in 1862. It was a sculpture entitled "Nydia," by the American sculptor Randolph Rog- ers, who had spent his youth in, America and who later became one of the leading figures in the Classical Revival. The University collections moved from one building on campus to another, until they were finally established in Alumni Memorial Hall on its completion in 1910. Lewis Bequest In the meantime, almost 500 paintings by European artists of the 19th century had been request- ed by the University by Henry; C. Lewis of Coldwater. Collections of Egyptian anti- quties of the first to third cen- tunies after Christ were expanded by archaeological expeditions of Prof. Francis W. Kelsey. They were the beginnings of the KelseyI Museum of Archaeology.' In 1946, the Museum of Art became an administrative unit, and the Universty embarked on an acqiusition program. The Mar- garet Watson Parker bequest pro- vided for over 600 items to be given to the University. This is "the most important single col- lection of works of art acquired by the University to date," Prof. Charles H. Sawyer, director of the art museum, said. Recently, the museum's acquisi- tion program was extended to in- clude early Western art since the Sixth Century A.D., Near and Far Eastern art including India, but with emphasis on Japan and China. The Stearns Collection of Musi- cal Instruments shows musical in- struments as an art form. j "instrumentso xneiiaissance Eu- Also shown are several tiny rope and the Far East when they violins used by dancing masters had more than just a functional in the 17th Century. The master use. iwould take the tiny violin out of shis pocket and use it in conducting The collection includes colorful an orchestra. ancestors of guitars with many In former centuries, there were layers of woodcarvings, highly dec-1Inyfr ce nts,trick orated and ornate instruments of many freak instruments, Hettrick 17th and 18th century France and remarked. One such nstrument on Italy and strange instruments of display is a 19th Century cane the Far East. rlarinet. The idea was that a man h'ast. Findtaking a walk might get an urge 'Hard tot Find' to play a tune. If he had his cane "Some instruments in the col- clarinet, he could stop and play. lection are hard to find in their A French violin on display has native countries today," collection the carved head of a man with a curator Prof. Robert Warner of handsome beard. Some of the in- the music school noted. I struments have had painting and many have intricate design work. "We use some of the instruments Tuba Ancestor in our consorts," William Hettrick, Among the instruments is a assistant curator, added. The con- French musical serpent, an an- sorts, directed by Prof. Warner.' estor of the tuba, used first in are pesentedbyfaculy nd stu- rches. An ophicheide from dents who play medieval and Ren- Spain is serpent-headed and- was aissance melodies. Their composi- used for its terrifying; effect. tions use viols and voice, the viols;AnodFechrnndipa being six- and -seven-stringed in-an old Fren hornso iscpay struments shaped like violins, but I hangiagmovabl otiece.f By not losly elaed o t em.mouthpiece, the musician could An 18th century Italian viol - get different effects. the Viola d'Amore-is on display. Beetle-shaped lutes of great Hettrick noted its "tremendous craftsmanship as the terobo of resonance" made possible by 17th Century Italy are on display. 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