The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 06, 1977, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1977
Counselors help students select li
By CINDY JACOBSON
John was graduated from high
school in 1973 and is now about to
receive his college degree. He
doesn’t know why he chose his
major, or what he wants to do with
that degree or even if it is what he
wanted at all.
Although hypothetical, this situa
tion is not uncommon according to
personal, academic and career
counselors at Texas A&M Universi-
ty '
Not only seniors face this prob
lem. Most students at one time
question their curriculum choices,
the counselors said.
Selecting a major in preparation
for a career is not simple for stu-
Sun power
dents and the counselors under
stand this problem.
Students 18 and 19 years old are
expected to choose a major without
enough exposure to the working
world. It is difficult for them to
know what job would be suited to
them. Dr. Wade Birch of Personal
Counseling Service said.
“Some students can only list
about eight jobs to choose from
when actually there are some
40,000 listed in the United States
Dictionary of Occupational Titles,”
he said.
Unaware of job alternatives, the
students also are confronted with
parental pressures, salary consid
erations and prestige associated
with the major of their choice, he
added.
Every student has had to face the
problem of selecting a major. No
one can choose a major for an indi
vidual, but counselors like Birch try
to help students understand them
selves more completely and identify
personal influences that affect deci
sion making.
Academic counselors like Ronald
Lewis take personal factors into
consideration, but they focus on the
student’s aptitude, capabilities and
expectations.
Vocational tests may serve as a
guide for students who have a hard
time narrowing their interests
down.
Once the interest has been found,
counselors look at the student’s
capability in that field and help de
termine if his or her goal is in the
realm of the real world, Lewis said.
From there the counselors help
the student plan a curriculum. They
do not stress making a decision.
“Decisions are too limiting,”
Lewis said. “Plans can be changed
more easily.’
While freshmen and sophomores
seek guidance in the selection of a
major, seniors and graduate stu
dents seek to be reassured that they
majored in a field right for them.
mand for graduates with a degree in
the major considered, what kind of
job is offered, the salary that can be
expected and where that job would
be located.
All counselors agreed that there is
no set solution in solving the ques
tion of what to major in. At best,
they can advise and inform.
But they are available for assis
tance and hundreds of students seek
their help every month. The Per
sonal Counseling Service is in
YMCA 017, the Academic Careers
Counseling Service is in Academic
Building 107 and the Career Plan-
ning, and Placement Centerifl th
the 10th floor of RudderiL
Each office has counselors arl Unifed Pr
raries for additional inforniaBHINGTt
brochure will be coming on® ,aml of
naming the place and the per™"”"
see for particular problems,V
said
ions,
the one h
refuse
“A number of seniors and
graduate students are still searching
for that feeling of certainty and de
cidedness,’’ Lewis said.
How can someone obtain this se
cure feeling? By self-examination.
Louis VanPelt of Career Placement
Services said students should or
ganize their thoughts.
Along with interests, capabilities
and expectations, they should con
sider the job market and the actual
working world.
They should see if there is a de-
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may reduce
electric hill
X.
The sun may save your utility bill.
A Texas A&M University researcher
said a combination of solar power
coupled with standard electrical u-
tilities could keep energy prices
within reason.
The price of electricity is not
going to go down and conventional
methods of producing electricity are
not going to be totally replaced by
nuclear, solar or wind power. With
this new system there is still hope
for the consumer, said Dr. A. D.
Patton, an electrical engineering
professor.
Patton, conducting investigations
funded by Sandia Laboratories, said
the final figures aren’t in, but the
operation of parallel energy systems
may be promising, "particularly in
the Southwest.”
There are such things as solar
total energy systems that can pro
duce electricity and heat. Solar col
lectors can produce a working fluid
at 600 degrees which can drive a
turbine that produces electricity
and still have 200 plus degree
exhaust to produce air-conditioning
and heating,” Patton said.
“However, this system requires
heat storage and has no alternative
in case of breakdown or mainte
nance, all of which makes it eco
nomically unattractive by itself,” he
said. “Our alternative is to eliminate
or minimize storage required for
nights and cloudy days by having
the standard utilities ready for use
when the solar system is not.
“Another hypothesis of this sys
tem is that solar energy peaks at the
same time as the air-conditioning
load,” Patton said. “If the solar
power system is operating at its
peak then the strain is removed
from the standard utility grid which,
in turn, means a savings for
everyone.
This couples a savings in fuel ex
penditures as well as capital outlay
costs for new equipment. The total
savings will give a rough idea of the
money that could economically be
invested on the parallel solar energy
system.
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“If we can come up with a
bench-mark figure, it will give
manufacturers something to shoot at
in the areas of cost for solar sys
tems,” Patton said.
“Sandia has provided a computer
program into which we can plug
most of the variables associated with
this experiment,” he added. “In
formation on the energy demands
for a Texas utility company
(cooperating with A&M) and the
weather data for the region served
by the company (converted into
solar information) are all put into
the computer which will produce
figures on potential savings by use
of the system.”
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A&M women we
win state title pj]
at drill meet
Texas A&M University women’s
and University of Texas at Arlington
men’s teams won Texas ROTC
championships here Saturday.
Nine teams battled in the state
title meet sponsored by the Texas
Adjutant General’s Department.
Combined points in inspection and
basic and fancy marching phases de
cided the championships. The com
petition was judged by personnel
from the Eighth Marine Corps Dis
trict.
UT-Arlington's Sam Houston
Rifles unseated the A&M Fish Drill
Team that has been state champions
since 1972.
The Texas A&M Women’s Drill
Team swept all three phases in
claiming its first state cham
pionship. UT-E1 Paso placed sec
ond.
UT-Arlington fashioned its
victory with second places in in
spection and basic drill and first
place in fancy drill. The team’s
839.3 (out of 1,000) point total sur
passed the A&M team by 17 points.
The Fish Drill Team claimed firsts
in inspection and basic drill and
second fancy drill.
Other winning teams were from
Tarleton State and Northwestern
Louisiana State. Teams from Mis
souri and Arkansas also competed.
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