i TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1928 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE ----------- PROFESSOR LEROY WATERMAN RETURNS AFTER LEA'VI SPENT IN UNEARTHING ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA Absent on leave in Mesopotamia pedition was financed by the To- for the past year, Professor Leroy ledo Museum of Art and 1100 arti- Waterman of the Department of Iles he discovered and brought back Semetics has been excavating in with him will be divided between the ruins of Seleucia, one of the the University and the Toledo Mus- greatest cities of the Old World,! and one that has stood on the same site for at least 3700 years. Sele-1 ucia was the successor of an earlier. city known as Opis, which Greek 1 students will recognize as lying in the route taken by Xenophon and: his ten thousand Greeks. Tel Omar, as the present site ofI Seleucia is called, is about fifteen miles south of Bagdad, in which city Professor Waterman has been on leave of absence as annual pro- fessor of the American School of Oriental Research. After some pre-I paration, working with the Univer- sity of Chicago expedition at Me-t diggo and the Philadelphia expedi-, tion at Beisan, Dr. Waterman feltt ready to undertake the excavations at Tel Omar. The cost of the ex- eum. Before the excavators started in, the site appeared as a complex of hills rising as high as fifty feet in the air, composed largely of the debris of sun-dried bricks, used by countless generations of Sumarians and Babylonians in their buildings. A most obvious proof of ancient oc- cupation were the numerous coins picked up by the Arabs here and there in the dust and debris. A majority of the coins were of bronze, although some of gold and silver were found. They were, how- ever, so badly corroded that they will have to be treated before they can be identified. They range all the way from Seleucus, the founder of the city, through the period of Nero down to Turkish times. Other objects which were exca- vated by the workmen include wa- ter jars, beads of amber, glass, cor- al, semi-precious stones-some of which were still in strings; and a quantity of gold foil in a brick- lined tomb, used apparently for a body covering, although all traces of a skeleton had practically disap- peared. Several skulls were also brought back by the expedition which will enable anthropologists to arrive at some conclusions re- garding the type of people living in ancient times. To carry on his work, Professor Waterman commanded a force of from 25 to 75 men, all native Arabs. Ordinarily, one man was employed to do the digging and two or three boys carried off the material exca- vated. Professor Waterman has thus not only returned with a very interesting and valuable collection of ancient objects but he has set- tled the question, "Where was Opis?" ft 1|tU111tit11tt 1lttttttit1ttttttttttttt littitttttttt !ttttttttltittttlltittlltlttl lit11ttttitl itlltlltlltll lltlttllt lt lltltti llttl lltllttlltltt ltU111tltUltll r W STT S. NX T A r l i i i ll l i i ll l i l ll i l ll l ll l il i l l i il i ll i l l i l l i l l i i l ill l i l l il l | |1Y1 1 11 1 1 1 11 11 1 1 l i l l i l E OF ABSENCE ommmmimImmImmmmmmmtm -. l11ill IlllllltllilIIIII lll 1111IIIIU AN CITY SELUCIA Semi-Cei GUGGENHEIM FUND RECIPIENT NAMED = Milton J. Thompson, '25E, M. S. I22 Aero, '26, assistant to Professor Fe- lix Pawlowski of the Department of Aeronautics during the past year, is the recipient of one of the first awards of the two Fellowships of- fered by the Daniel Guggenheim fund for the promotion of Aero- I2= nautics. The Fellowship carries with it the sum of $2,500 which will enable Thompson to spend a year in War- saw where he will study under Pro- fessors Witoszynski and Brosko, of the Warsaw Polytechnic School. In addition to his studies in Warsaw, Thompson will have time for travelat b and investigation abroad. 2 The Guggenheim fellowships are designed to assist the training of =2 teachers and investigators in the THE U N I V E R 5 field of aeronautical science. - -° iHILL AUDIT4 --- October 10 ROSA Pt Miss Ponselle is recogizedl by comp P L IE S ties as the outstanding operatic dramati the day. She has been heard in Ann A previous occasions, first about ten yea October 22 AMELIT Critics and laymen alike throughout world look upon Galli-Curci as the pre ponent of Coloratura sijging. She will -=-- Ann Arbor for the third time. After he appearances with the Chicago Opera, a November 12 VLAD Soloist K-'ladimir Horowitz, the distinguished 1 1 K ist, whose genius has risen like a miglh the heavens, will make his Ann Arbor _== occasion, as soloist with the Detroit S chestra, under the baton of Victor Horowitz has won the most favorable c ==November 23 THE This world renowned organization v farewell tour after twenty-five years c success. During all these years, with o its personnel has remained intact. U original viola player has been succeeded December 13 FRITZ -- Kreisler is recognized throughout t music as "the greatest of them all." N our time can equal him in his hold upon t none has won and maintained that ho qualities. He has played in every mus January 18 ROLANI Born in the Southland in extreme pov of a former slave Mother, he underwe 22 childhood and early youth all of the v life to which poverty is heir. Industry, and hard work brought him forward January 24 THE PR ilored A special committee of Czechoslavaki has been successful in bringing this re semble group to this country for a limit< concerts, one of which will take place i -" This Chorus is made up of sixty schooli their native city and their American t ° quaint music lovers in this country with ~IIFebruary 13 SERGEI As an interpretative and imaginative playing is a mirror of chosen music. tions first made him famous in Ameri tically all piano programs included some It is not surprising that when he first b to this country for brief tours, his se have been in great demand. A number February 20 YELLY This distinguished Hungarian has had triumphs such as should satisfy the me artists. New York, Boston, and other gr critics have been unanimous in their w mendation. By some she has been c "conquests whereverlshe goes," others st is an artist to her finger tips." Such March11 DETROIT A Alfred Hertz, who will wield the ba Gabrilowitsch's distinguished band of pl second appearance in this season's seric standing conductor. Formerly Wagner at the Metropolitan Opera House, he i head of the San Francisco orchestra