Geologists and Mammoth Teeth UNIVERSITY OF OREGON GEOLOGISTS, in structors and graduate students, visited Eastern Ore gon during spring vacation and name luck with the two mammoth teeth pirtured (right). The geologists are, standing (from left)—I*hll Porter .senior in ge ology, Alan Powers and R. E. Corcoran, graduate students In geology; kneeling—(from left)—Ewart M. Baldwin, assoelate professor of geology, and J. E. Gair, assistant professor of geology. Professors, Graduates, Excavate For 10,000-Year Old Mammoth By Leonard Calvert The recent discovery of a mam moth skeleton took two professors and three graduate students to The Dalles area to do excavating work during spring vacation. Ewart R. Baldwin, associate pro fessor of geology, and J. E. Gair, ‘'assistant professor of geology, ac companied by R. E. Corcoran, Alan Powers and Phil Porter, all gradu ate students in geology, found sev eral leg bones and parts of the skull of a presumably woolly mam moth about 10,000 years old. The original discovery, of two teeth, was made by a farmer, For rest Hay, who lives near The Dalles, who in turn called S. C. Sargent, a University of Oregon graduate who is now the geologist for The Dalles dam on the Colum bia river. It was .Sargent who call ed Baldwin and told him of the discovery. Hay was looking for agates when he found the teeth. Scattered IJoncs Frequent This is the most complete mam moth skeleton found in Oregon in recent years, Baldwin said, but it is doubtful if the whole skeleton of this animal will be found. However, finds of scattered bones are fairly frequent, Baldwin said. Within the last year, tusks have been found in a Harrisburg irrigation ditch, at the Look-out dam project near Lowell and in a bank of the Wil lamette river near Harrisburg. The name of the mammoth is as yet undetermined, Baldwin said, ns is its exact age. There were no hu man artifacts near the remains to help dale the animal. Teeth Important Finds The most important find was the ~two teeth of the animal, Baldwin said. They arc very well preserved. A strange feature of the.se teeth is that the enamel ridges at the top of the teeth run clear to the roots and as the animal wears his teeth down, new teeth push the old ones up until they are w-orn away und the animal starts to wear down the new teeth, whereby the process is repeated, Baldwin said. Helen McGillicuddy, curator of the museum of natural history, is currently putting preservatives on the bones and filling the cracks, Baldwin said. All the remains that were excavated have been received and are being prepared for even tual display in the museum, he said. The bones are especially dif ficult to prepare because they were rot petrified and have started to rot, and therefore crumble easily, he explained. More Research Plan Baldwin is making tentative plans to return to the area and do some more excavating to see if some more of the animal can be found. The expedition will probably take place early this summer. The group also found a tusk of a mastodon a few miles from the other discovery. The tusk was buried in a Pliocene age formation, Baldwin said, when no elephants lived and the department is pretty sure that it is a mastodon. "Lots of people find fossils but don't realize what they are or if they do, they don't know who to all about it,” Baldwin said. "The geology department is interested in the foss'ls if they are good spe cimens and they would like to keep a record of where the fossils occur and the beds in which they occur so that the fossils can be more easily dated.’’ Rhinoceros Tooth Discovered The University party also dis covered a rhinoceros tooth of the lower middle Pliocene age, which "could be" three or four million years old, according to Baldwin. The tooth was found at the McKay reservoir, south of Pendleton. In previous trips to the McKay area last summer and the winter before, University of Oregon geologists discovered various camel, rhino ceros and horse remains. The latest was partially financed by research funds. OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON CO-OPERATIVE STORE 4 :(X) p.m. — Thursday, April 17, 1952 Room 207 Chapman Hall World News Capsules-— Flood Pours Down Missouri River; Sioux City to See Crest Tonight Compiled by Donne Lindbecb (From the wire* of the United Press and Associated Tress) The merciless flood pouring down the Missouri river posed a fre h threat Sunday night when it became apparent that it was outrunning its timetable. Target number one of the Missouri is Sioux City, la., where a crcrjt had been expected Monday night. Engineers now say the crest will hit the nearly deserted city, early tomorrow. The crest is estimated a foot higher than previously. Late Sunday the Missouri had risen two feet above Saturday’s record mark. Six hundred blocks of Sioux City and its suburbs are already under water and at least 2,500 persons are homeless. Downstream, Omaha saw the river stage surge past the level which1 has stood since 1881 as a record. The whole river valley from Sioux City to Omaha is covered with flood waters. High winds and a tornado hit Ohio . . . ... in widely separated sections Sunday. The tornado swooped out of the west to strike the edge of the tov.n of Dover in northeastern Ohio. The roofs were ripped from two small' factories. None of the 400 employes of the plants were at work. Hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of damage was caused In central Ohio by high winds that ripped roofs off houses and leveled a 100-year old church near Zanesville. Steel negotiations will qet goinq aaain . . . ...Monday afternoon at Washington. When the talks recessed fer the Easter weekend, there were no signs that the industry, and the steelworkers union were anywhere near agreement. In fart Union President Philip Murray warned that the union would not. in effect, wait forever; that appeared to imply a new strike threat if wage tali 3 don't show a change soon. The Ohio Bell telephone company said . . . • • • Sunday night it's close to an agreement with 12,000 striking CXO communications workers and that a settlement appears only a matter of hours away. Ohio Bell indicated the agreement would be close to the $4 to ST a week won by Michigan Bell last week. A surprise announcement was made ... . .. Sunday night by Senator Tom Connally of Texas, chairman of the important senate foreign relations committee. Returning to Washington after a few days in Texas, Connally issued a statement which said: "I do not desire to be a candidate for renomina tion at the Texas primary.” shot... Jjs stt Tfurr ) ( L\Ttxe PATCH ) / <3F TAICWAy S V JUST OVtR l ( Tl* AT TRAP ? :k OUT WHERE you want it to be . /ACRE OFTEN THAN NOT WITH TKE expendable DOT • J* W THE GREAT NEW SPALDING / DOT L POWERED BY fe "TRU-TENSION" 1 WINDING WITH ' "'TEMPERED* THREAD FOR UNIFORMITY, AVAXIMUM DISTANCE COMBINED WITH THAT SWEET DOT* FEEL AMD CLICK. n ^ ■> 1 ' SPALDING OOT p'O"* • rrt -\ /■> ^ r / OTHER FAMOUS SPALDING GOLF BALLS.. THE FAST AIQ-FLITE l'tru -tenssonVcund WTTKrTLrrLTTD"TH REAP) AMD THE TOUGH KRO-FLITE At-tD TOP-F LITE* 7 *AT PS.OTESSIONAL. SHOPS ONLY (g7 sets the pace in sports Ml HiW$P9K7SSl!9W890K ^ cf Mullin Caitoons published in this r.ocit cily. WRITS TODAY TO SPALDING—DEPT. C-52 Ch:copee, Mass,