Soviets discover bones of The Michigan Daily -Sunday, April 7, 1985- Page 3 Neanderthal 6 MOSCOW (UPI) - Soviet scientists said yesterday they had discovered the bones of a Neanderthal man in southern :Siberia, sharply expanding the area :believed inhabited by the craggy-Nen browed predecessor of modern man. k"The notion that Siberia was Spopulated by men of a modern Jflr physiological type who came from other regions of the world has been convincingly refuted," scientist A. erevyanko told the official Tass news Neanderthal man hav agency' nArc n h id "IT CAN NOW be affirmed that in Africa and the Midd thinking man evolved in Siberia as Although his popula well " said Derevyanko, director of the a primitive brute the Institute of History, Philology and heavy-boned skull wh Philosophy of the Siberian branch of the larger than teskull U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. large The report, calling the discovery a average. "world class find," said the bones of Neanderthals are kn Neanderthal man and animals that he fire, some sort of lan was probably hunting were found in a ticed burial rituals. small cave in the Gorny Altai region, more than 2,000 miles east of Moscow. THE FATE OF the Neanderthal man, named for the site has been a subject of of the original discovery in Germany with some believing_ more than a century ago, is best known after disappearing! from the caves of Europe. He is classed others saying he died as a subspecies of modern man. vance of modern men r BONES attributed to varieties of weapons. in Siberia ferthal may have ited to America e also been found le East. r image is that of e brain inside the s actually slightly current human mown to have used nguage and prac- Neanderthal man constant debate, he evolved long in Europe, but out before the ad- with much better The Siberain discovery indicates a much wider distribution for the craggy- browed Neanderthal than previously known, also placing him on the route toward the land bridge that then joined Asia and America. Derevyanko apparently believes Neanderthal man was evolving in Siberia into modern man, rather that previous theories that the region was unpopulated until modern man arrived fully developed from other areas of Europe and Asia. "The last link in a chain of discoveries, which allowed us to come to such an important conclusion, was a find in the Altai cave and traces of life of a Neanderthal man who lived there 40,000-45,000 years ago," Derevyanko said. HAPPENINGS- Sunday Highlight The U-Club will present "Dinner & the Movies" today with Monty Python's And Now for Something Completely Different. Dinner will begin at 5:30 p.m., and the film starts at 7 p.m., in the Union. Films rHill St. - 2001: A Space Odyssey, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. AAFC - The Joke, 7 p.m., Black Peter, 8:30p.m., MLB 4. CG - The Sign of the Cross, 7 & 9:20 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Mich - The King of Kings, 3 & 7 p.m., Michigan Theater. Alt. Act. - Mujeres Del Planeta, Filemon Y La Gorda, El Hombre, 7 p.m., Nat. Sci. Performances School of Education - Basically Beethoven 7, 2 p.m., Faculty Piano recital, Jerome Rose, 4 p.m.; piano, Vladislav Kovalislav, 6 p.m.; piano, Laura Kargul, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Meetings Society of Physics Students - "Panel Discussion on Jobs in Physics," ,t Roam 2038, Randall, Lab. Miscellaneous Universalist Lutheran chapel - Worship, 9:15 & 10:30 a.m., 11511 Washtenaw. His House Christian Fellowship -- Dinner, 6:30 p.m.; Bible Study, 7 p.m., 925 East Ann Street. Men's baseball - Indiana, 1 p.m., Fisher Stadium. Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Lobby Sale, 10 a.m., 1800 North Dixboro Road. Associated Press Bitter mourning South Africa black actor John Kani leads the funeral procession for his brother, Xollie Kani, yesterday in Zwide Twp. near Port Elizabeth. His brother was killed during violence with police. Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets during clashes which erupted with some of the 15,000 mourners during and after the procession and burial. Protests, NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) - Sudan military coup was triggered yesterda by weeklong public protests and, paralyzing general strike in Khartou against new price increases planned b President Jaafar Numeiry. But more than deterioratin economic conditions in Africa's large country may have played a role in th overthrow of Numeiry, whos popularity has been dwingling for mo ths. NUMEIRY - who previous coup a tempts in his 16-year rule of the bitter divided Moslem and Christian nation- recently took his first, hesitant ste toward softening the country's hars legal and political system. He ordered the arrest last month of 12 members of the "Mosle Brotherhood," an influential Islam sect that included some of his close advisers. The arrests were widely see as Numeiry's attempt at slowing dow Sudan's headlong dash toward Islam rule. Many members of the sect had bee instrumental in Sudan's adoption la year of the Islamic Sharia law, in whit penalties range from floggings to an putations of limbs for such "crimes"a possession of alcohol or adultery. SUDAN'S adoptions of the Sharia September 1983 was widely criticiz and triggered discontent within th economy sparked 's country, particularly in the taken", the diplomat s y predominently Christian south, where It was not immedia a rebels are fighting government troops. new military govern m Numiery recently made several at- civilian government by temps at reconciliation with the months - will be pr southern rebels. ig The Sudanese People's Liberation st Army, the main guerrilla movement in.. he the south, did not respond to Numiery's M ilita se overtures and continued its attacks on n- many troops and installations. MEANWHILE, the drought-stricken * ly teetering under the weight of hundreds - of thousands of Ethiopian refugees who ep fled into Sudan to escape the famine in (Continued from1 sh their own country. vassador in Nairobi, t In addition, the United States froze International that al 20 $194 million in U.S. aid to Sudan, ap- career military man m parently for failing to adopt an believe the army shou ic austerity program to help pay back politics. st some of the $130 million it owes the In- "He is strictly a m en ternational Monetary Fund. think he has intervene wn Numiery later relented and accepted military out of politics ic an IMF program (and some U.S. funds) S , b for the rehabilitation of Sudan's shat- Sudan's dambassa en tered economy that includedprice in- coup in Sudan asa st creases of up to 60 percent for Sudanese "without political iin ch consumers - price increases that led to may soon return m- Numeiry's downfall. to civilian rule. as "There was a strike in the country by Sudan's defense m civilians demanding the resignation of Swar Al-Dahab, took in the president, for a week or so. I think government and imp ed that the strike prompted the army of- yesterday while Pi he ficers to take the steps they have Sudan 's coup aid. tely known if the nment - or the promised in six o-Western or it it will turn toward Moscow or neigh- boring Libya. It was also uncertain whether the country would abandon Sharia law. try seizes power lanese coup' Page 1) told United Press -Dahab, 50, is a "who does not ild get involved in ilitary man and I ed only to take the ," Ayub added. dor to Kenya, the leader of the a military man inclinations" who the country inister, Kahman k control of the osed martial law residnt Jaafar Numeiry was in Egypt. The dipl6mat said Al-Dahab, in his early 50s, graduated from Sudan's military academy in 1956. - "I don't think he has any political am- bitions, he is very much an apolitical person:without political inclinations," he said. "He is a military man who does not believe the army should get in- volved in plolitics. "He (Al-Dahab) said the army was intervening for an interim period and although he did not specify the length of that period, ' don't think it will be long," Ayub said. "There was a strike in the country by civilians demanding the resignation of the president, for a week or so. I think that the strike prompted the army of- ficers to take the steps they have taken. 52,000 Germans protest U.S. missiles Monday A TTENTION KRESGE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION LIBRARY PATRONS ACCESS to the Kresge Business Administration Library will be LIMITED from April 14 through May 1, 1985 during the following hours: Highlight The Center for Near Eastern & North African Studies will present a lec- ture by Robin Barlow, entitled "Population Policies in the Middle East and North Africa." The lecture will begin at noon in the Lane Hall Commons Room. -Performances PTP - Cloud 9,8 p.m., Trueblood Theater, Frieze Building. School of Music - Piano Recital, Derek Parsons, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Bill Collins, "Let's Plant Perennials," 7:30 p.m.,1800 Dixboro Road. Macromolecular Research Center - Lon Mathais, "Supernucleophilic Pyridine Polymers Via Cyclopolymerization," 4 p.m., Room 3005, Chemistry Building. Chemistry - Arthur Ellis, "Luminescent Properties of Semiconductor Electrodes," 8 to 4 p.m., Room 1200, Chemistry Building. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Computing For Poets, Part 1," 3:30 p.m., Room 165, Business Administration Building. Geological Sciences - Judith Moody, Geologic Aspects of High Level 4 Nuclear Waste Isolation in Salt," 4 p.m., Room 4001. C. C. Little Building. Engineering - James Brinkley, "Impact and Windblast: Development of Air Force Advanced Ejection," 3:30 p.m., Room 115, Aerospace Engineering " Building. r Meetings Asian American Association - 6 p.m., Trotter House. Christian Science Organization - 7:30 p.m., League. The Reader's Theater - 8:30 p.m., Room 2013, Angell Hall. Miscellaneous Industrial and Operations Engineering - Seminar, Aseem Chan- dawarker, "Dynamic Lot Sizing in a Job Shop/EMA," 4 p.m., Room 241; In- dustrial and Operations Engineering Building. Guild House - Readings, Beth Brant & Kathryn Vangen, 8 p.m., 802 STUTTGART, West Germany (UPI) - Organizers said about 52,000 people in more than 120 German towns yester- day protested U.S. nuclear missiles, but a West German official dismissed them as communist-inspired demon- strations. It was the second of four straight days of traditional Easter protests ex- pected to culminate with* huge peace rallies outside U.S. bases today and tomorrow. IN AN interview with South German radio, Interior Minister Friedrich Zimmerman said communists were playing a major role in the ,demon- strations. "Never before were the themes, the leadership and the organization of the Easter marches so clearly communist as this year," he said. Typical of the demonstrations was a protest attended by about 200 people in the Stuttgart satellite town of Kor- nwestheim. Demonstrators waving banners that Man found unharmed in nearby groce rystore (Continued from Page 1) Emergency Room. He was checked there and is now being evaluated at the Ypsilanti Regional Psychiatric Hospital. Spokespersons for the two said "Amis (Americans) out" and "Jobs instead of rockets" gathered in the main plaza, many with backpacks stuffed with homemade rockets sym- bolizing the atomic demolition mines with which U.S. units in West Germany are reportedly equipped. A succession of speakers denounced the arms buildup both in the EAst and West. Corrections The LSA Student Government has endorsed presidential candidates Paul Josephson in the upcoming MSA elec- tions. A story in yesterday's Daily in- correctly said they endorsed Josephson's VOICE party. Saturday's Inquiring Photographer was photographed and written by Carol Francavilla. It carried an incorrect byline. MONDAY-THURSDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 5 P.M. -11 P.M. 11 A.M. - 5 P.M. 11 A.M. -11P.M. The Library will limit access to the following patrons: Business Students Non-Business Students who are currently enrolled in a Business School course University of Michigan Faculty University of Michigan Staff Patrons needing to use the collection who have received a Research Pass. These can be obtained at the Business Library reference desk Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. In order to enter the Library, every patron must have one of the following: 1) VALID UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ID CARD 2) FACULTY OR STAFF APPOINTMENT CARD 3) RESEARCH PASS TO FIGHT! Get your own copy of SPRING/SUMMER SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $ 7.00 in town $1 2.00 out of town