Page 6A THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1977 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN WE KNOW YOU ARE FEELING THE PINCH THESE DAYS, BUT TAKE A BREAK AND WOR SHIP WITH US THIS SUNDAY. WORSHIP SERVICES AT 8:15 AM. AND 10:45 AM. WORSHIP CELEBRATION AT 0 P.M. ists study baking pits The proximity of several baking pits to stands of native pecan trees are causing some concern among Texas A&M University ar cheologists studying a site near Taylor along the San Gabriel River. Dr. Harry Shafer, associate pro fessor of anthropology and principal investigator on the $39,811 National FUTURE CPA’S LEARN NOW ABOUT THE NEXT CPA EXAM CPA REVIEW 713-692-7186 Parks Service (NPS) project, says the pits, apparently used for baking, are the first of their kind seen in Central Texas. Native Americans apparently visited this spot repeatedly, and nearby pecan trees have led the Texas A&M researchers to specu late that pecans may have been one drawing card. “What attracted later white settlers are probably the same things that attracted these early in habitants,” Shafer said. The NPS awarded the grant in February so the archeologists could survey, record and recover material from the site. The area will be inun dated by the 65,000 acre-feet Lake Granger, now under construction. Further studies at the project will be conducted when the Texas A&M archeological summer field school convenes there in July. Field supervision is under staff ar cheologist Clell Bond. In order to efficiently use the pits, explained Shafer, the prehis toric inhabitants of the site apar- ently dug a two-foot by two-foot bowl and constructed an intensely hot fire inside. The heat of the fire served to make the pits almost ceramic in figidity which greatly aided their preservation. So far, Shafer said, the examination is not far enough along to determine how they used the pits as cooking or bak ing aids. “We have to know what they ate before we can fully realize how they prepared it,” he said. An assortment of fossilized animal bones and mus sel shells have turned up, aloi with some stone tools and a[f fragments of pottery. Shafer said that most of the p: historic activity at the site occurs in the past 500 years, and evidea suggests little activity prior to yeas ago. The researchers seek to deti mine if the area’s prehistoric ancia dwellers used specific camp ati for particular duties and if types of stone tools can be traa back to individual quarries. OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT 1/3 or USA COURSES BEGIN MAY 26 & NOV 24 A&M scientists study oil storam THC3SMM BUS Of THE SCAB VIVITAR WILSON’S SPECIAL 229 95 Wi Ison s /-v r— Reg. Price 249.95 462837 Your can’t beat the system! The vivitar 220/SL 35mm camera has through-the-lens metering, Copal square shutter, & 50mm f1.8 lens. The Automatic Electronic flash gives exposure from 2’ to 10’. The Automatic 135mm f2.8 lens is for larger images, & the 2X tele converter transforms 50mm lens into 100mm & 135mm into 270mm. To carry the whole system, there’s the Enduro case. Wilson’s also carries Sporting Goods, Silver, Gifts, Housewares, Jewelry and Toys—contemporary shopping with old-fashioned quality and service. temple mall TEMPLE, TEXAS 10:00 A.M. -9:00 P.M. MON. - SAT. ■.W-r--* •■••OV.A-V . ‘M. JEWELERS • DISTRIBUTORS Two Texas A&M University sci entists may be kingpins in the U.S. Government’s recently announced effort to store a national 90-day sup ply of crude oil underground. The supply would amount to a billion barrels. Dr. Robert Unterberger, who has gained recognition by pioneering the exploration of mines by radar and sonar, thinks an opportunity has developed to help the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) by plumbing the storage areas to pre vent problems. Unterberger is as sisted by Ken Butler, a graduate student. The FEA’s plan is to use caverns /upTnamh* S® Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74 Greg Price If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . .. We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location; 3071 Northwest Hwy 3S2-8570 member/fdic new car financing for graduating seniors And defer the first payment for six months. Pick out the car you want, drive it this semester, then begin your payments after you go to work. The Bank of A&M can put you in a new set of wheels today. Terms include 100 per cent financing (including insurance); deferment of the first payment up to six months; loan repayment extended up to 48 months (including the deferred payment period); and credit life insurance. Bring your job commitment letter or your application for active duty month. We can work out a repayment program that fits your circumstances. See Mike Laughlin ’65 or Lt. Col. Glynn Jones (USAF-Ret.) ’43 The BANK of A&M No bank is closer to Texas A&M or its students. 846-5721 in iron, sulfur, limestone and salt mines to store the crude oil. The problem is that neither the govern ment nor the mine owners know exactly the physical limits of the seams they are working. To prevent possible leaking and pollution they need to know what the limits are. “We found, in the past, that we could use radar in salt mines to find the edges of the domes of salt mines located below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico where hitting a pock et of water or the edge of the dome would be disasterous,” Unterberger said. He added that a small amount of moisture in the salt makes the radar completely useless. “The water absorbs all the energy,” he said. “It’s just like a mi crowave oven. The hamburger you put into it is cooked only because it contains water which is heated by the radar waves. So, by the same token, that’s where our energy goes, into heating the water.” We were frustrated until we re membered that sound waves will travel through salt or water so why not ‘wet salt ? Now we’ve just re turned from the Weeks Island Salt Mine (which could hold 89 million barrels of oil) and found we could penetrate 750 feet of this wet sail. Unterberger said they fired li sonar through pillars of salt and4 roofs of caverns. The distanceswe known and the scientists coil calibrate it to the time the soi) wave took to penetrate thatli “Then we pointed the mackii straight down and found we mi see’ a round-trip distance of l,5 feet,” he said. FDA demands recall of 14,000 GE sunlamps United Press International WASHINGTON — About 14,000 General Electric sunlamps are being recalled by the Food and Drug Administration because of al- The Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion arc those ‘ on ’ Room 216, Reed McDonald Building, Col ei/ the editor or of the writer of the article and are loge Station, Texas 77843. not necessarily those of the University administra- United Press International is entitled exdu- tion or the Board of Regents. The Battalion is a sively to the use for reproduction of all news dis- non-profit. self-supporting enterprise operated hy patches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of students as a university and community news- other matter herein reserved. Second-Class paper. Editorial policy is determined by the postage paid at College Station, Texas. editor. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor shtmld not exceed 300 MEMBER words and arc subject to being cut to that length Texas Press Association or less if Ionizer. The editorial staff reserves the Southwest Journalism Congress right to edit such letters and does not guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must he signed. Editor Jamie Aitken show the address etf the writer and list a telephone News Editor Debby K re nek number' fe>r verification. News Assistant Carol Meyer Address eenrespemdente to Letters to the Sports Editor Paul Arnett Editetr. The Battalion. Room 216. Reed Assignments Editor Mary Hesalroad McDonald Building. College Station. Photo Editor Jim Hendrickson I Texas 77843. Copyeditor Mary Alice Woodhams ! Represented national hv National Educa- .Y ' Cawley Darrell tional Advertising Services. Inc., New York City. U,nford Glenna Wh ", l 'T ^ ^cGra",. John 1 Chicago and Los Angeles. W Tynes Sue Mutzel. Lee Roy Lcschper )r i Photographers Mike Willy, The Battalion is published Tuesday through Jim Crawley Friday from September through May except dur ing exam and holiday penods and the summer, when it is published weekly. Student Publications Be>ard Boh G. Reegers. , Mail subscriptions arc $16.75 per semester. Chairman. Joe Arredondo. Tom Daxesey. Dr $33.25 per school vW. $35 00 per full year. All Halter. Dr John U Hanna. Dr Charles subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising McCandlcss. Dr Clinton A Phillips; Jerri Ward rates furnished on request. Address: The Battal- Dirccterr of Student Publications. Gad L Cooper Sun Theatres 333 University 846-9808 Super-Grody Movies Double-Feature Every Week Special Midnight Shows Friday & Saturday $3 per person No one under 18 Ladies Free $3 With This Ad BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS can give you something to smile about. • efficiency & 2 bedroom floorplons • bus service ro and from campus • managemenr-sponsored parries • clubhouse and pool • Semester leases available • Special summer rates 693-1325 502 Southwest Parkway liJilloujick apartments professionally managed by legedly defective timers that cm burn users. Some 5,000 of the “Time-Ali Suntanner” kits already have be recovered from GE’s distributi system, the agency yesterday sai but another 9,000 are still in channels or have been soldtoci sumers. The timing units are theprobk FDA said. Some fail to soundah zer and switch the lamp off at the time. Consumers are asked to remc the bulb and return the timer unit to G.E., 1705 Cleveland, Ohio, 44112 orn G.E.’s toll-free number 800-32 7170 in Ohio, 800-362-2750 for structions about returning the to for a replacement. The FDA said the units uwoh would have been purchased af December 1976. ‘Gig ‘Em’ sign has scientific m by planetarium New use has been found for li hand signs that distinguish Tei Aggies from UT Longhorns. Application of the Aggi< thumb-up “Gig ’Em” and U1 index-and-pinkie-extended “ ’Em, Horns” is described by Cm lyn Sumners of Houston’s Baker Planetarium. Sumners said that planetarium staff uses the symhc gestures to help program viewe measure angular distances amoi the stars. An angle of about 15il grees, depending on spread fingers, is covered by “Hook’Em A three-degree measurement represented by “Gig ’Em arms’ length, Sumners wrote in May issue of “Sky and Telescope The article describes program» tivities at Burke Baker and radio shows on astronomy - KTRH and KLOL-FM - cii| ducted by the planetarium story also includes photograpl demonstrating use of “Gig’Em “Hook ’E m.” 7 tm RENTALS: low rates tor all rivers SALES: Aluminum & ABS Canoes Maps, Paddles, Eureka Tenls Camp Trails Backpacks Also your TEXAS CANOE TRAIL! rental agent for canoe, kayak, (i rentals on the GUADALUPE RIVEf Includes car shuttle. Phone ford# and reservations. Dr. Mickey Little College Station (713) 846-7307 ■ Clip and Save DON’T LEASE FOR FALL! UNTIL YOU HAVE SEEN “CHEYENNE” Beautiful 2 bedroom 1 bath Four plexes next to “Durango”. If you missed out on Durango, don’t miss out on “Cheyenne!” Come to A&M Apt. Placement NOW 2339 S. Texas, College Station “Next to the Dairy Queen” (Rj 693-3777