AGE EI HT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 i =rW~u 1u'A -Daily-Dick Gaskill Work Resumed on Addition To Union Despite Weather Although weather has caused a few days' delay, construction on the Union addition continues. The Regents have approved plans to add two more floors to the original addition., Completion of the project is expected by Dec. 1, according to Frank Kuenzel, general manager of the Union. He said that "parts of the build- ing will be open before Dec. 1." At this time, most of the foot- ings ar'e in place, except on one side where a roadway runs through the scooped-out area. The steel structure that is now standing is the elevator shaft. Kuenzel noted that the present Union passenger elevators must be used as freight carriers be- cause the other was taken out in the course of demolition. The new elevator is expected to be in op- eration by April. Budapest Quartet To Open Series Playing in the 15th annual Chamber Music Festival, sponsor- ed by the University Musical So- ciety, the Budapest String Quar- tet will present the first in a series of three concerts on Friday in Rackham Auditorium. The Budapest String Quartet makes more than 100 appearances a year, including its annual long- term engagement in the Library of Congress. Both series and single concert tickets are available in the Bur- ton Tower offices of the Musical Society. Kuenzel also said that the Un- ion's elevators will be turned 90 degrees so that the complete Un- ion corridor will be clear. Young Democrats To Hold Elections The Ann Arbor Young Demo- crat Club will elect officers and make plans for the coming semes- ter at a meeting at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow in the League. For entertainment the group will play "The Investigator," a recorded satire of a United States Senator. r DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Reorganization Meeting of the Co- Recreational Badminton Club,. Wed., Feb. 16, in Barbour Gym at 7:00 p.m. Come prepared to play after the meet- ing. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, Wed., Feb. 16, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. Industrial Relations Club meeting Wed., Feb. 16, Stanley H. Brams, edi- tor and publisher, Detroit Labor Trends, "I Cover the Labor Front," at 7:30 p.m. In theB us. Ad. student lounge. 'Shtiggy' NEW ORLEANS ()') - Nine hours of "Shtiggy Boom" greet- ed the listeners of a New Or- leans radio station yesterday when two disc jockeys locked themselves in the transmission room and played the record from 6 a.m. on into the after- noon. The performance started as a gag and got out of hand when the two men refused to answer the phone Sole interruptions of the rec- ord were the regular ccmmer- cials. Air Invention Credit Here Incorrect A predecessor of the Wright brothers was incorrectly credited for many years in the United States with the invention of the first successful airplane, according to Captain J. Laurence Pritchard, former secretary of the Royal Aer- onautical Society of Great Britain. In a lecture entitled, "The Wright Brothers-from an Eng- lishman's Point of View," spon- sored by the aeronautical depart- ment of the Engineering College, Capt. Pritchard said that prior to the Wright Brothers' successful flight at Kitty Hawk; North Caro- line in 1903, the Smithsonian In- stitute had sponsored the flying experiments of Samuel Langley. Langley Experiments Failed Langley's attempts to fly all ended in failure. When the Wright brothers appeared with their "lighter-than-air" machine, the Institule refused to accept the failures of Langley and insisted that he was the originator Consequently, he said, the Wright brothers took their pat- ents to England, where they were accepted within three months aft- er being filed.1 Exceptional Men The inventors, Capt. Pritchard said, were probably exceptional men in several ways. Their back- ground consisted only of bicycle repairing, and from 1903 to 1911, they used figures obtained with a sixteen inch square wind-tunnel. In 1932, the Smithsonian Insti- tute realized that the Wright brothers had made the first suc- cessful flight, and then published their accounts. It was not until 1948, however, that the location of their plane was moved from the Science Mu- seum in South Kensington, Lon- don, where it had been for twenty years, to the Smithsonian Insti- tute. G&S Society Picks Leads For Iolanthe Leading parts for the forthcon- ing Gilbert and Sullivan Society production of "Iolanthe" were an- nounced last night. The Lord Chancellor will be played by Robert Brandzell, '57M, The Earl of Mountararat by Ar- nulp Esterer and the Earl of Toll- oller by Alan Crofoot, Grad. Jbeseph Wyckoff will be seen as Private Willis, John Geralt as Strephon and the Fairy Queen will be played by Marian Mercer, '57M. Playing the part of lolanthe w#i1 be Lynn Tunnel while Joan Holm- berg, '57M, will be seen as Phyllis, Katy .Micou, '57M, as Celia and Beatrice Berger, '56M, as Lelia. The operetta is scheduled to be presented April 13 through 16 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre and April 23 in Detroit. "Iolanthe" is the second presen- tation in the Gilbert and Sullivan Society's bi-annual schedule. The production will be planned, direct- ed and staged entirely by Univer- sity students. Group To Give Herbert Comedy "The Moon Is Blue," recent Broadway hit by F. Hugh Her- bert, will be presented by the Ann Arbor Civic Theater at 8 p.m. to- morrow through Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Tickets for all performances are priced at $1.50 and can be pur- chased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office this week. Book Exchange A recount of Student Book Ex- change sales for this semester sent the figure over the $9,000 mark, assistant manager of the Exchange Harvey Freed, '56, said yesterday. - ri- - - - - Life AT 'U' MUSEUM: Via Fossils on View "NE OF THE largest university museums in the country is found behind the tradition-encas- ed lions in the large V-shaped building on the way to the wo- men's residence halls. A wing of the building contains offices of the anthropology, bot- any, paleontology and zoology mu- seums as well as work rooms for mounting, stuffing and repairing. An extensive view o f l i f e through the ages is seen in the Hall of Evolution. Ancient Relics Fossils of some of the earliest and some of the largest animals that ro meaeadr ild. ....a noann that roamed earth, sepecially in and around the state, are on exhi- bition. Some of the figures are mounted, others are pictured in their environment. Discovered in 1944, the remains of a mastodon found in the state are considered the most complete and the best preserved. Mastodons lived perhaps as late as 20 thous- and years ago when the last ice sheet was receding across north- ern Michigan. Early Porcupine The dimetrodon ,while a slow- moving animal, was fierce and car- nivorous and usually left alone be- cause of the sharp spines on his back. Anatosaurus or duckbilled dino- saurs, were extant about 75 mil- lion years before' man. The one pictured below was found in Mon- tana in 1939. It died at the edge of a stream, buried in mud and sand so quickly that the carcass was loosely studded with small bony plates. In the background are some of the dinosaur's contemporaries. All disappeared soon after, the time represented. Indian Tomb The skeleton of a young Indian woman was 47 Inches beneath ground level when found in 1927. The grave was covered by a mound 14 inches high and 11 feet in dia- S meter surrounded by a ditch 8 inches deep. Lengths of eras with their cli- mates and inhabitants are detail- ed in a large colored mual "Life Through Geologic Time." Besides animal fossils, there are some petrified tree trunks from Indiana snd Arizona on view. Life through adaptation or ac- climation or environmental change becomes even more vivid among the relics of the museum. to t.. THE DEVELOPMENT OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS THROUGH GEOLOGIC TIME DAILY PHOTO FEATUR Story by HARRY STRAUS .Pictures by DICK GASKILL STRINGED INSTRUMENTS Repair- Reconditioning Accessories A#~ajk le !: I _>_ 6IMETRODON: PROTECTION PERSONIFIED STRING SHOP 211 South State Phone NO 3-3874 4i t4 f4 - - U. i:"Y ;ii Y i t ................. UR " tiw Yl: a+'r d!x ' 4lalIll t: ONE OF THE BEST PRESERVED MASTODONS IN THE WORLD INDIAN SKELETON it r + > :.. t>:..fk