et atS ysics- n Clt; n tk ist t* Page 3 College Station, Texas Tuesday, January 14, 1969 THE BATTALION and Si hite E and Sj if k n ^ T . *4 M- » Engineers Get Top Job Offers cs IES s 7781 ntatio tatioi NAMED FOR APOLLO MOON LANDING MISSION These three astronauts, civilian Neil Armstrong-, Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Collins, and Air Force Col. Edwin Aldrin, have been named as the crew of Apollo 11 mission, sched uled to land on Moon about midsummer. Armstrong will command, Collins will com mand the module pilot, and Aldrin will be the Lunar module pilot. (AP Wirephoto) At The Movies “Bullitt” is a from-the-gut version of the cop and robber epic, one of many films that were made familiar by Humphrey Bogart and, more recently, Frank Sinatra (Tony Rome, The Detective, Lady in Cement), Paul Newman (Harper), and George Peppard (PJ). But “Bullitt” breaks the old mold. “The Detective” used caustic, cutting dialogue and DONT LOOK MOW But you may be about to blow your life n astonishing number of people make a stupid and tragic mistake. To put it simply, they jump into careers without really looking. The result—a dreary life Of frustration and anger. Can this happen to you? Could be—unless you can answer ques tions like these to your own satis faction before you make your move: Are you really a Chief...or an Indian? Do you belong in a big organi zation? Or a small one? Or do you belong by yourself? Can you really stand pressure? There are a great many serious questions you must ask—and an swer—about a career. But the most critical are the ones you ask your self about yo«. Unless you can an swer them honestly, it makes little sense to ask, for example, “What’s it really like to be an investment banker?” Careers Today can tell you what it’s like to be an investment banker. More important, this meaningful new magazine can help you decide whether becoming an investment banker is even a sen sible option for you in the first place! It’s a magazine about careers that starts not with jobs, but with people. And it’s dedicated to the proposition that you must do your own thing...and that if you don’t, you run the grave risk of blowing your life. Careers Today is relevant. For people who are searching.../row people who have discovered how to do their own thing. How about you? Could you use a little truth at this point in your search? Use the coupon below ...or the coupon in the colorful brochure dis tributed with this pa per... to enter your Char ter Subscription to Ca reers Today, at the spe cial Charter price of just $5 for one year (11 issues) instead of the regular post-Charter price of $ 10. 6W66P! tSMMj P. O. Box 2457, Terminal Annex Los Angeles, California 90054 ll I'd like to become a Charter Subscriber to | Careers Today. I understand that I pay 1 just S5, instead of the regular 810 annual rate, and that this entitles me to receive Careers Today for one full year (11 issues). MR. MISS MRS. circle one) n COLLEGE AND YEAR FIELD OF STUDY J Please bill me $5 marriage to a nymphomaniac to move the plot; the plot itself, in volving an expose of big city cor ruption, was complicated. Bullitt has none of these. Its plot is simple. The hero, Steve McQueen, is Detective Lt. Frank Bullitt, terse, tough, dedi cated to the principles of . . . it’s hard to say what principles he adheres to. Anyway, Bullitt and his helpers are assigned by a vote seeking politician to guard a man who is to testify before the politi cian’s crime committee. THIS WOULD seem an easy enough assignment, until you realize that it’s the Mafia that’s after the guy. And the Mafia’s arm is swift and efficient. They shoot him, and the remainder of the movie concerns McQueen’s at tempt to find out whodunit. But the plot is not what makes “Bullitt” run. It moves by means of fast cars and shotgun blasts, and how it moves is easy to watch. Take the moment, for instance, when the stool pigeon, shot gunned, is transferred to the hos pital. It’s not a nice, white, clean hospital, on which are labeled neat names of doctors in clean white robes, as seen in daily soap operas. Instead, it’s a place much like what really exists. It is crowded, with bloody, crippled bodies and tubes and opaque liquids flowing, and pain. When the doctors operate on the stool pigeon, when they are attempt ing to save his life, the doctors aqtually perspire, and seem wor ried. As one writer has described it, you can almost smell death when it comes. It’s real, man, stark, so much you get sick at your stomach. OR TAKE another of many fantastic moments in this flick. The Chase. When wheeling through the streets and hills of San Francisco, Bullitt finds him self being tailed by the Mafia, who think he’s nudged their bus iness dealings too much, already. So they chase him. And they turn a corner, and they lose him, until he appears in their rearview mirror, chasing them. Maybe that’s the principle Bullitt ad heres to — maybe that’s the rea son he does his job so well; he is The Hunter. It probably has more sheer ex citement than any other movie No. 1 In College Sales Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company 303 College Main 846-8228 A PARDNEK YoiTU Always Win The Showdown When You Gel Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS by Mike Plake of its kind. Technically, its ef fects are perfect. If you’re the type that identifies with your characters, see “Bullitt,” and kill everyone on your block. Job offers to bachelor degree candidates in the technical disci plines at A&M started on a sound note in the last months of 1968 as employers interviewed pros pective employes, Placement Di rector Robert C. Reese reported. In a two-month salary survey of job offers, Reese pointed out candidates for mechanical engi neering degrees received the highest offers ranging between $934.87 and $745, for an average of $810.30. One offer of $950 was made in the same discipline to a stu dent working on his master’s de gree. Petroleum students scored sec ond with salaries ranging be tween $880 and $850, with an average of $865. ELECTRICAL engineering ma jors came third with offers of $875 to $770.93, for an average of $809.84. Other high salary averages for students earning master’s de grees this month included aero engineering, $934.89; industrial engineering, $930.20; computer science, $908.06, and industrial statistics, $905. Reese said A&M job offers are comparable to those of a year ago. Nationally last year at this time the number of offers to bachelor degree candidates in the technical disciplines in 122 col leges and universities was down 26 per cent over the previous January. This year the national January volume is up 25 per cent over a year ago, and the total of 2,179 offers is just short of the all- time high of two years ago, Reese noted. A&M is one of the 122 univer sities participating in the na tional College Placement Coun cil’s Salary Survey. UNLIKE LAST year’s unusu ally slow start, recruiting in the early months of the 1968-69 sea son “has come close to rivaling” the all-time high of two years ago, council officials said. The council’s data is based on actual offers made to male stu dents at representative institu tions from coast to coast. Non-technical volume, which experienced only a slight dip last January, is up 14 per cent this season. AT THIS EARLY stage in the recruiting season, the average national offer for undergraduate technical candidates stands at $800 per month, an increase of 4.3 per cent since June. The non technical average is $692, a gain of 5.3 per cent since the close of last season, Reese said. r.4 OF NEW HAVEN/A GENTLEMAN’S SHIRT |iim Marnco uniberfittp men’s toear 329 University Drive 713 / 8445-3706 College Station, Texas 77840 ATTENTION STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS ENGAGED IN RESEARCH! Did you know that your Research efforts may qualify you for tax benefits? FOR THIS AND OTHER TAX INFORMATION CONTACT: BLOCKER TRANT, Income Tax Consultant 4015 Texas Avenue — Bryan, Texas Phone 846-7842 Engineering and Science at IBM “You’re treated like a professional right from the start! “The attitude here is, if you’re good enough to be hired, you’re good enough to be turned loose on a project,” says Don Feistamel. Don earned a B.S.E.E. in 1965. Today, he’s an Associate Engineer in systems design and evalua tion at IBM. Most of his work consists of determin ing modifications needed to make complex data processing systems fit the specialized requirements of IBM customers. Depending on the size of the project, Don works individually or in a small team. He’s now working with three other engineers on part of an air traffic control system that will process radar information by computer. Says Don: “There are only general guide lines. The assignment is simply to come up with the optimum system.” Set your own pace Recently he wrote a simulation program that enables an IBM computer to predict the per formance of a data processing system that will track satellites. He handled that project him self. “Nobody stands over my shoulder,” Don says. “I pretty much set my own pace.” Don’s informal working environment is typi cal of Engineering and Science at IBM. No matter how large the project, we break it down into units small enough to be handled by one person or a few people. Don sees a lot of possibilities for the future. He says, “My job requires that I keep up to date with all the latest IBM equipment and systems programs. With that broad an outlook, I can move into almost any technical area at IBM—-development, manufacturing, product test, space and defense projects, programming or marketing.” Check with your placement office If you’re interested in engineering or science at IBM ask your placement office for more information. Or send a resume or letter to Charles Cammack, IBM Corp., Dept. C, 1447 Peachtree St., N.E., Room 810, Atlanta, Ga. 30309. We’d like to hear from you even if you’re headed for graduate school or military service. An Equal Opportunity Employer IBM.