Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, June 18, 1983 Skeleton of mastodon found near Kalamazoo By KAREN TENSA A Universityscientist and researchers from Western Michigan Univeraity are digging up the remains of a prehistoric animal found buried beneath a western Michigan sod farm. The tusk of a mastodon, an elephant- like prehistoric mammal, . was discovered two weeks ago by the owner of a farm near Kalamazoo. University Paleontologist David Fisher, an expert on mastodons, said the find is "very important" since scientists don't know why the mastodon died out ap- proximately 10,000 yers ago. "CAREFUL digging and analysis of this site can help in finding out if human hunting was involved in the extinction of the mastodon," said Fisher, an assistant professor in the University's geological sciences department. At one time, paleontologists were in- terested mainly in assembling the mastodon skeletons they found. But now, Fisher and other researchers are using the skeletons to determine how the animal died. So far, the researchers have unear- thed the skull and jaws; some of the neck and back vertebrae; part of the ribs and feet; and both of the shoulder blades. "WE WON'T be able to tell for cer- tain if the animal was slaughtered until we find the pelvis and more of the back vertebrae," said Fisher, since knife marks on these parts will indicate if the animal was butchered. As skeletal parts are discovered, they are shipped to Western Michigan University, where they are cleaned and preserved to prevent their deterioration from exposure to the air. Western Michigan University An- thropologist Elizabeth Garland is over- seeing the excavation of the site. The skeleton's final home has not been determined - the farm's owner, Western Michigan, and the University will make the decision jointly. The University's Exhibit Museum already has a complete mastodon skeleton in its collection. In addition a smaller exhibit in the museum's rotun- da displays a mastodon found in Ann Arbor that shows evidence of human butchering. $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN. Shows INDIVIDUAL THEATRESbefore 6:00 p.m. Best Picture of the Year! 1982 ACADEMY AWARDS! Ben Kingsley; BA RGAIN PR ICES! A DU LTS $2.00 TOUES $1.50 ANDHI: Sat, Sun-1:00 4:30 8:00 > "Bravo for Zeffirelli's 'La Traviata' you will leave dazzled down to your socks. .. . Rex Reed, N.Y.Post "Franco Zeffirelli's 'La Traviata' is not only a total triumph but the best filmed opera ever made." -Bernard Drew, Gannett Newspapers "La Traviata' ... a personal triumph for director Zeffirelli. It's not to be missed." Vincent Canby, New York Tirnes IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports State higher edueation budget passes House of Representatives LANSING - The 1983-84 budget for higher education as approved by the House Thursday includes more generous funding for small colleges and less money for private schools than the version approved by the Senate. The House approved Senate-passed budgets for higher education, com- munity colleges and the Department of Education. The House higher education bill retains the Senate-passed 9 percent hike for the state's three biggest schools, the University, Michigan State Univer- sity and Wayne State University. The House approved a 8.5 percent hike for small colleges, however, in- stead of the 7.5 percent passed by the Senate. The extra money comes from funds the Senate had allocated for private college students. State to review waste storage LANSING - Michigan will voluntarily review the question of high-level nuclear waste storage in an effort to keep the federal government from for- cing a decision upon it, a health official said yesterday. The review by a special task force named by Gov. James Blanchard could have the effect of keeping a controversial high-level radioactive waste dump out of the U.P's granite formations rather than enchancing the state's chan- ces of having a disposal site forced upon it, said Lee Jager of the state Department of Public Health. "If we were to just sit back and wait and then have any special concerns, we lose our opportunity," said Jager, who is heading the task force of seven state agencies and a variety of private groups. MX protesters detained at base VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - Air force officials detained 13 people, including activist Daniel Ellsberg, who entered the base yesterday in an effort to halt the first test-launch of the MX missile. The protest was unsuccessful, however, as the Air Force was able to com- plete the launching of the MX, late yesterday afternoon. to tne military we seem almost scatterbrained, yet it's working," said Vandenberg Action Coalition member Susan Komisarup. "It's almost amazing to think that a handful of activists is running around in the bushes in their blue jeans outsmarting the military." An Air Force security lieutenant, who asked that he not be identified, said Ellsberg was among those detained yesterday. Ellsberg is a former gover- nment analyst who leaked the top-secret Pentagon Papers about the Viet- nam War to the press in 1971. "The protest is a success because we wanted the world to know that this government cannot test first-strike weapons without having to arrest American citizens," Ellsberg was quoted as saying by Cathy Ryan, a spokeswoman for the Greenpeace organization involved in the protest. Pope urges return of Solidarity WARSAW, Poland - Pope John Paul II bluntly told Poland's military leader yesterday the banned Solidarity union should be reinstated, and Solidarity supporters responded with a second night of anti-government marches. The pontiff, his journey home fast becoming a triumph for the outlawed iabor movement, also won government agreement for a meeting with Solidarity chief Lech Walesa. "The meeting is taking place at the will of our guests," said government spokesman Jerzy Urban. A government source said officials had been "scared" by the huge pro- Solidarity demonstrations that erupted Thursday after the pope's arrival for his eight-day visit, and by the bluntness of his remarks against the martial- law regime declared in communist Poland 1/ years ago. Face to face with Communist Party leader Wojciech Jaruzelski in War- saw's Belvedere Palace, the pontiff told the general "I do not stop hoping" that the 1980 agreements recognizing Solidarity, the Soviet bloc's first in- dependent trade union, "will gradually be put into effect." Italian police arrest 425 in organized crime crack down NAPLES, Italy - In a nationwide crackdown on organized crime, police said yesterday they arrested 425 people including a Roman Catholic priest, a nun, a television quiz show host and several local politicians. Those arrested are suspected members or supporters of the Camorra, a powerful group of criminal gangs similar to the Sicilian Mafia. Warfare between the gangs has claimed 106 lives in Naples this year. All suspects were charged with drug smuggling, defrauding the state, and. "illegal association," a catch-all charge Italian police use against organized crime suspects. More than 10,000 paramilitary police and special agents made the arrests in coordinated raids in Naples, Rome, Milan, Venice, Bologna and 21 other cities throughout Italy Thursday night and early yesterday, police said. The chief state prosecutor in Naples, Francesco Cedrangolo, said more than 900 warrants had been issued, including 337 served to those already in prison on other charges. A FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI FILM Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata (G) Sat. Sun - 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30