: IAGE T~WO - - ! 1 1, o1w ; 111 11" wl"" 0 '""! THE MICHIGAN DAILY . . .. .. .. .. .. . . . .............. - GEDLOTGIT IEN0TIItS CORAL FOSSIFOUND li RFFNBAY REGION C LECTION WAS DISCOVERED RY PROFESSOt GOULD LAST SUMIE REPORT BEING PREPARED No New VarIetes Includ e in Group Brought Baek FFrQN Arcti By Putiiam Expedition. Fossils brought back from Baffin land by Prof. Lawrence M. Gould are being identified by Prof. Russel C. Huss'ey of the geology department. Gould discovered the fossils while ex- ploring Baffin Bay as a member of the Putnam Baffin Bay expedition. Corals, sponges, snails, and crutaceans are Included in the collection. These fossils were laid down one hundred million years ago during the Palezoic age, according to Professor Hussey, during the Trenton and Rich- mond horizons. During this age the wIole of North America sank and the land was covered by a sea that came from the arctic regions. The climate was unusually warm and there was an .bundant growth of sea life. There Were no vertebrate ani- mals at this time, he said. "The coral fossils which Professor Gould found grew in shallow water that must have been as warm as 68 degrees. Sub-tropic conditions exist- ed at that timeas- far north as Green- land," Profesosr Hussey said. "The, comparative shallowness enabled the coral to grow and the grea. span of the sea helped to spread the sea ani- mals uniformly over North America. Specimens brought back by Professor GWd aire idential xhh some speci- mens found ir.then Michirain and Minnesota, whchi proves the enormous size of the se iat that time." Are'ft New Fossils "Professor Gould did not discover any new fossils, but only ti new loca- tion for them. The fossils of Baffin were studied by Charles Schuchert1 who visited that region in 1897 as a member of the seventh Peary Arctic expedition." Gould discovered the fossils forty miles inland on a high mesa which, the party christened "Putnam High-t land." He had hoped to correlate the outcrops of fossils in that northern, region with those found further south in America. The big snail shells of the collection ar covered with lime- stone from the countless time whenf they lay on the bottom of the sea. During the ice age they were proba- bly buried below tons of ice. When they were found last summer they were in almost perfect condition. A report is being prepared by Gould1 and Hussey on the results of the dis- covery. Gould plans to present them in a speech given at the annual meet- ing of geologists at Cleveland, Ohio, during the Christmas holidays and a written report will appear sometime in March. Californian Inspects1 School Of Forestry4 While On Campus1 Prof. Emanuel Fritz of the Univer- sity of California, visited the campust recently and inspected the School ofr Forestry and Conservation. He is onc his sabbatical leave and is doing e- tension work for various lumber com- panies preparatory to returning to his position as a professor of forest utilization. "Yournschool is especially well equipped in having a forest laboratory so accessibleytothe campus," he is. reported as saying. "This facilitates the study of silviculture methods greatly. House ways and mean committee has, set $250,000,000 as tentative maxi- mum for tax reduction. r AMERICA'S AIR HEROES-AND ONE HEROINE-CAUGHT TOGETHER BY CAMERA IN CAPITAL SATUR)'AY, NOVEMBER 2, 1927 ORDERED TO PAY FOR CLASS FEUD I r hmnun andlophimores will pay the venalty for their pranks before the Fall gaimes last week. according to an order which hlm "jist been receivcd by the Builling and -rounds depart- mnwft. It toys tO 'iY ove the class numerals from the chimney of the En- gincering huilding -nd from the en- gineering lahorartory arch. The Mill for removing and painting on the lah- oratory arch will eb(sent to the fresh- man class. according to the depart- 'nientofficials. In a checkup of the work (lone this season the dLepartmfent has discovered tha 2.7 miles of five '-foot sidewalk., or ;5,:00 square feet, have been laid du cig the summer and up to this i nie on the canius,. abhout the stal- n. h a mnons urronding university j property. Mtany new wvalks were laid on~z the camnpus during the summer. _I . 7 k; ilberts P 'V oxris f IrrHere is an unusual photo. It shows, all together, America's livig trans- nniP flXr io hldis r nnP :m c'nZ OVER WJ LASTNIHT oceani n yers, inciuuing one mz g heroine, at the White House. They had come to Washington to be guestsI of President Coolidge at luncheon and aottend Rthe onfnrrin f t fiha clXv vfe Hubbard Medal of the National Geo- Lindbergh, Ruth Elder, Paul Schluter, graphic Society on Colonel Charles A. Emory Bronte, lieutenant Albert H-eg- Lindbergh, first non-stop transatlantic enberger, Lieutenant George Noville, flyer. Commander Richard E. Byrd, GeorgeI Left to right in the group are, Lieut- Halderman, Charles Levine, Bernt enant Lester Maitland, Clarence Cham- Balchen, William S. Brock and Ed- berihn, Arthiu C. Goebel, Charles A. war(d F. Schlee. sion admitted that they were looking somewhat into the future but insisted U the need was a real one. It further 11~D Uirun M R 'M I1/ 7 road and the city will benefit from the OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Lenses and Frames made To Order 'N Optical Prescriptions FilledR HALLERS a State St. Jewelers Fresh Salted Nuts, Almonds, Pecans, Cashews, Pignalias. ;4 Filberts wrzl 1 LL1U cI CV1e'19 gOL Weo COE C (Continued from page one) DR. LLTTMA N TO relation of their financial resources to *V the demands upon them," Prof. LECTURE FRIDA Y Thomas H. Reed, of the political Due to a mistake in Thursday's science department, the third speaker Daily the lecture to be given by Dr. on the program said. "There is to- Enno Littman was announced for yes- day," he continued, "scarcely any part terday instead of next Friday. The of the township which, even at per- correct time is 4:15 o'clock on Friday, fectly legal speed, is more than fif- December 2, in Natural Science audi-j teen minutes from the other. The torium. county, indeed, is now no larger from Dr. Littmann is professor of Semitic the point of view of effective distances philology at Tuebingen university inI than was the township fifty years ago." Germany, and is the most outstanding The township, Profesosr Reed de- mvan in his field., His subject will be clared, is very definitely disappearing. "The Origin of the Arabian Nights." In Michigan, he said, for example, the He will lecture in English. township is all but extinct. "It is truer that a few populous townships in the FACULT Y APPROVE' neighborhood of Detroit or in the EXP ANSI N LA "Copper Country" manage to makeEXSOL 1 their township machinery serve the principal purpose of local govern- At a meeting of the faculty of tbe ment," Profesor Reed aserted. engineering school recently plans for mer,"Takingaltead ence," Pros-the expansion of the curriculum in "Taking all the evidence," Prof es- transportation were approved. Trhe sor Reed summarized, "If we cannot new plans include a consolidation of pronounce the township stone dead, the departments of railroad engineer- we cannot fail to see that it is mori- ing, and transport and highway en- bund. We might as well have the gineering. death certificate ready and filled in _Ineering.. with the cause of death-pernicious financial anaemia. The institutions which our ancestors brought out ofAI the forest with them is, before our own - eyes, passing away. The township," he concluded, "is finished as a useful unit of local government. Its strength has been undermined by the inexorable force of twentieth century"TH E speed. It only remains to put it out of pain." Dieterlie Benders Solos Dr. Robert Dieterlie,- soloist, ren- dered several selections, including°CO -ED "The Toreadore Song" from Carmen, "Nur Eina Nacht," by Geiger, "The Jasimine Door," and "College Days." Bright colleg Otto Stahl, of the University School of years-all the fu Music, was the accompanist. and the thrill 'The address by Prof. George E. and the tribula Myers, professor of Vocational Educa-- tiois of lif 25c Peanuts to $1 50 per lb lui fli ( l l IIL L U I Ul I IIII proposed cut oft Is Slade To Alleviate Congested Traffic on Delroil-Chicago Thoroughfare ELIMINATES BAD HAZARD' LANSING, Nov. 25.-The state pub- lie utilities commission recently au- thorized a grade separation between the Ann Arbor cutoff on M17 and the Ann Arbor railroad. This cutoff has been designed to carry through-traffic on the Detroit-Chicago road away from the congested streets of Ann Ar- bor. Vehicular traffic over M17 is very heavy, especially after football games, but ordinarily more than 6,000 autos crowd the road daily. The separa- tion was regarded as necessary to eliminate traffic hazards. I i i li s } ®s In preparing the plans, the commis- NO G\ SHOWIN f , ifI~z _ . , ;;rz: ,"' i F j e J I r . tion and Guidance in the School of Education, the fourth speaker on last night's program, is run in full else- where in this issue of The Daily. Stewart Churchill, spec., entertained with several number played on the marimbaphone. These included, "Ca- price Viennois," by Kreisler, "Spinning Song," by Mendelsohn, and the "Volga Boat Song." for Health Comfort Cleanliness I~ Install Zephyr Panels ;rounda crowd( canlp us-are bro with never a du Afarjonlh aves rolled stockin- her play basket as well. Is fe ed d:g1 to the screen now in a comedy fidl momient! is the fair co-ed down to the last -and it v ill open your eyes to see ball and score in the realm of love -ALSO- ON THE STAGE- -"THREE VAGRANTS" Merry Musicians .Smith's Down to Paramount Kindergarden the -Sea News SUNDAY-DANNY RUSSO and his ORIOLE ORCHESTRA r J 1 i --THE RAE SATURDAY ONLY "The Trail of the Tiger" AND 4 Other Fillums SUNDAY,-MONDAY Peter B. Kyne's "The Man From Hard Pan" RAE 0R H E U THEATER M i I I 4 No dust can enter to make your eyes smart, injure your complexion, or soil your clothes. That's why women are such enthusiastic boosters for ZEPHYR Panels. No drafts to hit passengers in the back of the neck! Real riding comfort- that's what ZEPHYR Panels give on rainy days, snowy days and windy days, just when you appreciate it most. SOON-SOON THE NIGHT OF LOVE At your service for ALCOHOL, CHlAINSy TIRE AND )BRAKE-SERVICE [if I I U -- UAUbN ~ -