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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1967)
I HARRY HELTZER 3M President, Top Officials To Talk Here President Harry Heltzer and five top officials of the Minnesota Mining- and Manufacturing- Com pany will be featured in the 15th Annual Executive Development Program beginning Jan. 22 at Texas A&M Universty. Heltzer will discuss “A Key to Dynamic Business Management” at 8:30 a.m. Jan. 24 in the Ra- mada Inn, announced W. E. Eckles, Executive Development Programs director for A&M’s School of Business Administra tion. A panel discussion regarding the same subject will immediate ly follow Heltzer’s address. Eckles said other 3M Company officials will comprise the panel. INCLUDED WILL be D. R. Guthrie, vice president for en gineering and staff manufactur ing; C. W. Walton, vice president for research and development; L. H. Fisher, vice president for personnel; J. F. Whitcomb, vice president for marketing, and Donald E. Garretson, assistant treasurer. Fifty-five men from eight states are expected for the three- week course which continues through Feb. 10. All sessions other than Heltzer’s presentation are scheduled in the A&M Me morial Student Center. Heltzer was promoted to presi dent of the 3M Company in 1966 after seven years as division, group and corporate vice presi dent. He joined, the firm in 1933, taking a factory post after gradu ation from the University of Minnesota with a degree in metallurgical engineering. HELTZER ADVANCED as signments of increasing respons ibility. He worked in the labora tory, in sales and production be fore becoming production super intendent of the Reflective Pro ducts Division in 1945. Three years later Heltzer was named Chemolite Plant production man ager, and in 1952 was promoted to general manager of the Re flective Products Division. Freeman Slates Seminar Here Former Texas A&M professor Dr. John C. Freeman Jr. will conduct a Meteorology Depart ment seminar Jan. 19 at the university. “Some Criticisms of the Lax- Wendroff Computing Scheme” will be presented at 3 p.m. in 305 Goodwin Hall, announced Dr. Vance E. Moyer, department head. Now research director at the University of Saint Thomas’ Storm Research Institute in Hous ton, Dr. Freeman was assistant professor of oceanography at A&M. He left to found Gulf Con sultants here. The Houston scientist partici pated in early experiments in numerical weather prediction at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. One of his main research interests is application of the method of characteristics to non-linear problems in meteor ology and oceanography. Dr. Moyer noted the Thursday seminar is open to the public. % OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! a; Per Annum Paid Quarterly on INSURED SAVINGS FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 2913 Texas Ave. m Competition Keen In Job Recruiting College seniors are receiving more and higher salary offers in what is expected to become the most competitive recruiting sea son in history. Despite the intense competition, however, the escalation does not appear to be as sharp as antici pated, declares W. R. Horsley, director of placement at Texas A&M Universtiy, one of the in stitutions participating in the College Placement Council’s 1966- 67 survey of beginning salary offers to college seniors. The coucil’s first report of the season shows that, since the end of June, the average offer to bachelor’s-degree candidates with a technical background has risen 5.2 per cent to $706 per month, while the average offer to non technical students has gone up 4.6 per cent to $596. Although it is still early in the recruiting sea son, the council’s first report has, over the past seven years, proved to be an accurate predictor for the remainder of the recruiting year. THE MOST notable trend re vealed by the survey has been the gain in volume of offers, rather than in dollar value. The sudden surge in demand for col lege-trained manpower by busi ness and industry has resulted in a 42 per cent increase in the number of offers reported this January to bachelor’s candidates compared with January 1965. Technical students in particular have been in short supply and the number of offers to this group has climbed 59 per cent in the two years. The survey, based on data col lected by placement officers at 116 colleges and universities from coast to coast, is conducted by the College Placement Council’s Salary Survey Committee. Locat ed in Bethlehem, Pa., the council is the coordinating agency of the eight regional college placement associations of the United States and Canada. THE DATA in the current re port, limited to male students, cover actual offers made from September 1 to December 13. The bachelor’s-degree phase is based on a total of 3,130 offers—2,344 to technical students and 786 to non-technical. The master’s sec tion covers 493 offers to students with less than two years of previous full-time, non-military experience, and the doctoral in formation is based on 182 offers to students in eight graduate programs. As in the past, the aerospace industry has made many more offers to bachelor’s candidates than any other of the 16 employer groups studied—924, almost one- third of the total. The most notable increase in volume has been recorded by public utilities, which was not included in the four most active groups at this time a year ago. This year it is second with 279 offers, followed closely by electronics, chemicals and drugs, metals, public account ing, and petroleum. A New Milestone in Edu cational Craftsmanship and Publishing In the 1967 World Book Encyclopedia • Over 12,100 pages • Over 25,000 illustrations • Over 7,300 color illustrations • Over 1,900 maps • Over 2,700 contributors • Easy To Use • Authoritative • Up To Date • Comprehensive JAMES O. FREEMAN District Manager Route 3, Bryan, Texas VI 6-6626 Call before 9:00 a.m. or after 5:00 p.m. THE BATTALION Thursday, January 12, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 3 Read Battalion Classifieds QMCK'SZE 1? " Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe with new standard safety features throughout. Thrives on quick decisions...but so relaxing inside. Give it a mile and it takes a mile. Run it through an s-curve and it comes out flat, smooth, and confident. Chevelle Malibu. The no-nonsense car from Chevrolet. When it comes to turning on the steam, Chevelle is no slouch. 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