Page 4 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1981 Local Newcomers supervised at weekend bonfire cut Preparations for the Aggie bon fire continue this weekend as stu dents are scheduled to cut at a site across from Texas World Speed way on Highway 6. Signs will be posted along the highway giving directions to the site, Al Link, junior head civilian for bonfire, said. “This is a chance for Off- Campus Aggies and people who haven’t gotten a chance (to cut) to come out, be under closer super vision and get an idea of what bon fire is about,” he said. “It’s almost a classroom situa tion. It will be a good time to have fraternities and the Off-Campus Aggies out there.” Cutting will take place Saturday and Sunday and will begin about 8 a.m., he said. The center pole for bonfire will arrive Monday and will go up Oct. 23 around 4 p.m. Cutting days also are scheduled for Oct. 24 and 25, Nov. 1 and Nov. 7 and 8. Su4i/6fad/8 Qux & & oX ^ non Co fS+AT)*M T3nr*j M o*lo tfRAW /V9 FLORICULTURE - ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE CLUB ANTSALE SATURDAY, OCT. 17 Pleistocene Era to be featured AT THE Carr^rnon GoJod iuBBOCC iT. AAA; 1| Held PLANT SALE FLORICULTURE GREENHOUSE 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Lectures to begin today Unite 3ALLA indusl By NANCY WEATHERLEY CLBtt Sample Pack CONTAWim Five 14SW* ICHVHIQ ■- EKVELOFfi Of HWAHT COFFK IEVtfUOf One Sample Pack with five deliciously different one-cup servings. JrisbJVlochct JVtini I Soisse \locbfi Cftfl' pRAMCAis Gratis OfNfcRAl fOCXlS |NU RNAliOfMAl CoffttS ST% Orange • Cfappuccmo ITALIAN STYLE INSTANT COEFEE SEVERAGE Creamy rich, with an orange twist. ONL CUU SLHVING Gratuit GfneraI foods iNTtRNAliONAl CoffttS CaFe Fraincais FRENCH STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE Smooth and light, French style. ONE CUP SERVING Kostenfrei GfnfraI foods IlNTF RINAT iONAl Cof ft FS * !> N THE KILLER JERRY LEE LEWIS Saturday; Oct. 17 Starlight Ballroom Snook Doors Open at 8 p.m. also Playing Midnight Express Tickets Available at all 3 Court’s Western Wear Locations of change in vegetation Texas area. “Changes in vegetation pat terns help scientists to understand how Indians in certain areas de pended on available resources for food,” he said. Vegetation changes affected animal supply because animals are dependent on vegeta tion as their food sources. “We can look at hunting pat terns Indians used to see how they moved from area to area as food resources changed due to climate changes,” Bryant said. A current theory maintained by some scientists is that the earth is in a non-glacial period now, but in 10,000 years, could return to an Ice Age similar to the one that ended the Pleistocene Era. “We are living in the Holocene Era during a non-glacial period, ” Bryant said. “By studying the vegetation changes that occurred during the Ice Age, we can study current vegetational changes to see if we might go into a glacial period in the future.” Eileen Johnson, from Texas Tech University, is scheduled to begin the series Thursday at 2 p.m. in room 204C of the Sterling C. Evans library. She will speak on environment and cultural in teraction of the southern plains in the late Pleistocene and early Holocene Eras. Friday at 2 p.m., Robson Bon- nichsen, from the University of Maine, is scheduled to talk on the technological repertoire of ancient man in the new world. Fred E. Smeins, professor of range science at Texas A&M, will discuss Oct. 28 at 2 p.m. similar ities of contemporary east african large mammal populations, such as the modern elephant, to anim als which became extinct during the Pleistocene Era. November 18 at 2 p. m. in 502 of Rudder Tower, Ernest L. lius Jr., from the Universifj Texas, will examine late tocene vertebrate communis the southwest. Bryant will discuss dimattii Texas and New Mexico durif late Pleistocene Era, Wedm Nov. 18 at 2. wing in been 1 ise of a e and im Japan s say. Manufa in chip, alcompc h Dallas lo me are c erest rat wsnosi ?erts sail of the Paleoindian hunting pattjfl,., for the genus Maimnuthus.wF includes the woolly mammi will be the subject ofdiscussioi Jeffrey J. Saunders, of the Illi State Museum, Nov. 20at2p Steele will speak on humani dator-prey relationships, Nov at 2 p.m. Thomas R. Vandevender,6 the University of Arizona, wli scheduled to end the seriesl day, Dec. 4 at 2 p.m., willsj* on southwestern environm during the late Pleistocene early Holocene Eras. All lectures, except the one ^ Lundelius, are scheduled Some e: nindusti econo in any ol cause of sssingne "The se |ntinues t ssion 204C in the Sterling C. EvansLj C g S ™^ rary l\v *6et ACTION with WANT ADS as mi sephC.F 'esident, I It has onths, am dlimprov “ s year or ^ of 1982 James C Dennis Ivey's Lakeview Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing' Thursday 1 “IVickle Beer Night!” Cover I $2.00 Person Lone Star Draft Beer SC a cup or $1.00 a pitcher (We also serve Lone Star Longnecks!) Music by Dennis Ivey and “The Waymen” Tickets for Joe Stampley (Oct. 24) Now On Sale! Saturday DENNIS IVEY and “The Waymen Our give witt prin gual Cover $3.00 Person For Reservations Call 823-0660 18-YEAR-OLDS — WE ADMIT MINORS! 3 Miles North of Bryan on Tabor Road