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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1978)
Page 6A THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1978 LAKEVIEW CLUB 3 Miles N. on Tabor Road Saturday Night: Roy Robbins & The Availables From 9-1 p.m. STAMPEDE DANCE Every Thursday Night $2.00 per person All Brands, Cold Beer 45 Cents 8-12 Sun Theatres 333 University 84€ The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS 846-9808 MANOR EAST III FREE MOVE! Midnight'Saturday-August 26 Rudder Auditorium MSC/Aggie Cinema Please pick up your free tickets at the Box Office prior to the feature. R ^ Just ivhen you thought it was safe to go back in the water... JAWS 2 LORRAINE GARY ROY SCHEIDER JAWS 2 I MURRAY HAMILTON Written by CARL GOTILIEB and HOWARD SACKLER • Directed by JEANNOT SZWARC Based on characters created by PE IER BENCHLEY- Music by JOHN WILLIAMS Produced byRICHARD D ZANUCK and DAVID BROWN • Associate Producer JOE lltoijBANIOIBod'l AiMIMl MCIURI KCHNICOlOR® PANAVISION* fo^™! sound i.aci. on mc» ‘tomas t rapts | IPGIniERIAl MDMCETuKtsnD^t ...MAY BE TOO INTENSE TOR YOUNGER CHILDREN Ism miiwh m wli « uiwi iw mi iumuii!;! .. CINEMA Starts FRIDAY! ADULT CHILD S3.00 SI .50 Job offers for grads up overall United Press International NEW YORK — New holders of bachelor s degrees in petroleum en gineering stepped out of college this year and had their pick of jobs with an average pay of $1,653 a month to start, the College Placement Coun cil reported Tuesday. And the good times for such specialists are part of the “biggest job boom” for new college graduates in the 19 years the council has been reporting on job offers to new bachelor’s, master’s and doctorates. Jean Kessler, the council’s direc tor, said overall job offers to bachelor s degree recipients were up 35 percent from last year 90 per cent ahead of the offers made in 1976. “This is the all-time biggest job boom,” she said. Even in the humanities — English, music, art, history and such —job offers made by industrial and governmental recruiters on the campuses of 160 colleges included in the survey were up 21 percent. At the doctoral level, 20 percent more offers were recorded than last year and almost 60 percent more than at the end of the 1975-76 school year. Master’s offers did not show the same gains, rising only 3 percent over last year. H owever, the in crease over two years ago was al most 50 percent. The leader in monthly salaries for master’s degree recipients was chemical engineering at $1,629. A doctorate in chemical engineering brought offers of an average monthly paycheck of $2,074. The money for the humanities graduates — lowest for any new degree-holder was $871 a month. “Those in the humanities have a harder time, but there are oppor tunities in sales, insurance, and banking, Mrs. Kessler said. If you have MONEY TO INVEST Optional Retirement Plan Tax Sheltered Annuity Deferred Compensation Financial Planning Tax-Free Income CALL HAYS GLOVER Guggenheim Glover, Associates 779-5555 Qbc) INTERSTATE 73W>, ,846-6714 & 846-115I UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CEN’ PUTT THEATRE GROUP SALES TIC^' WILL fiE ACCEPTED isthewoid: STARTS FRIDAY! " JAWS 2 _ t rn rn in iiiiiiim 1111.P GLAD TO SEE YOU BACK, AGGIE! It looks like a great year for the Texas Aggies and the professional Dallas Cowboys. Sljf Dallas ptoniino •Nttus 822-3191 SUBSCRIBE TODAY SEMESTER RATE: $8.50 August 25 to December &, 1978 Subscribe now to The Dallas Morning News. what’s up Wednesday ROOMMATES: Students who still need roommates for the fall semester may attend a roommate session at 2:30 p.m. in the MSC. Men who need roommates will meet in room 137A. Women will meet in room 137. CORPS: The Corps of Cadets commanders conference will he held at 7:30 a.m. in the Rudder Tower 601. Corps orienta tion takes place at 1:30 p.m. in the MSC 206. SPORTS CAR: The TAMU Sports Car Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Rudder Tower 305AB. CZECH CLUB: The C zech Club urge's all students whoneeda foreign language requirement to consider Czech. They will he signing up members at the beginning of the fall semes ter. See the Back-To-School Edition of The Battalion for more information. Thursday HASSLE FREE: Anyone interested in being a Hassle Free representative should meet at 1 p.m. in the Rudder Tower 404. HONORS: The University Honors Program will meet at 1 p.m. in the MSC 230. BAHA’I CLUB: The Baha’i Club will hold a public meetingat? p.m. in the MSC 141. VET RECEPTION: The first-year veterinary students will be honored with a reception at 7:30 p.m. in the MSC 206. Friday GRADUATION: Dr. William L. “Dub" Anderson of Dallas, immediate past president of the 27,000-member American Veterinary Medical Association, will be the commencement speaker for Texas A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine at 7 p.m. in the Rudder Auditorium. PICNIC: A Baek-to-School picnic for the members of the MSC Directorate will he held at 6 p.m. in theJ.B. Hervey home. KAMU SHOW: KAMU-TV presents closed circuit showing of Leonard Bernstein’s 60th birthday celebration at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Theater. A $2.50 donation to KAMU is re quested for admission to the show entitled “Bernstein and Rostropovich," HART BALL: Hart Hall will hold a back-to-school ball at 8 p.m. in the University Center Mall. CHESS: The Chess Committee meets at 6:30 p.m. in Rudder Tower 302. ALLEMANDERS: Aggie Allemanders will practice at 8 p.m. in the MSC 201. Saturday OPEN HOUSE: The 29th annual MSC open house and recep tion will be held from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. The event, spon sored by the MSC Council and Directorate, senes as a means of introducing new students to the administrators, faculty, student leaders and former students of the Univer sity. AGGIE CINEMA: "The Gauntlet. Aggie Cinema sponsorsa free midnight movie as a back-to-school treat for Aggies. Clint Eastwood and Sandra Locke star in this typical Eastwood shoot-em-up. This time Eastwood gets the girl. Movie will In* shown in the Rudder Auditorium. Sunday CONCERT: An “Afternoon of Chamber Music will be pres ented free for Aggie students at 4 p.m. in the Rudder Forum. Debbie Ogden, Janet Bloom, Ellen Schertzen and Susan Milles will be playing selections from Brahms and Mozart. Monday FALL SEMESTER CLASSES BEGIN Space center holds reunion for astronaut United Press International HOUSTON — Some wore con servative business suits and a few sported leisure suits and bright shirts with floral patterns. But the 26 former astronauts who came home to the Johnson Space Center Monday were mostly wear ing smiles as they walked the famil iar grounds and tuned their minds to the space jargon that dominated their lives for a decade or more. It amounted to the first “class re union the astronauts had held. There was one new twist for the former astronauts who talked »i their successors — some are' men. Most of the former astronU were as laconic as in the daysvA they first braved the frontiers space, tried new technology and 1 timately walked on the moon. Absent from the briefings w Eastern Airlines board Chaim Frank Borman, and two I’fc senators, John Glenn of OhioJ first American to orbit the Eart and Harrison Schmitt of Nl Mexico. Tj n ac Qbc) INTERSTATE UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 846-6714 & 846-1151 It’s the BIGGEST. Its the BEST. It's BOND. And B-E-Y-0-N-D. nmnnin as IAN FLEMING’S JAMES BOND 007 THE SPY WHO starring BARBARA BACH and CURT JURGENS as“Stromberg" MIDNITE SHOW r I ckets go on FBI. D SflT. ft! MIPNITE! $1.25 SALE AT 10:30 THEATRE ACROSS UN I V. DR. FROM ZACHRY ENG. CENTER Tap t and, ] ;lass a Action The, >ositio lent. Clas: ehiclc ate m rash r low m Tt’s lent ai 'ecur,’ Trad 11 a th ute tra Lniver ' e 31 dent sc and di luestic Torts Trail W' hal an Hon. T parkin ’ents, r oom d <l ( The decide Puter i s htute r ain-ca "ight-t Hon ut ‘Tra Peo ( ence Hob VV assists, r e Parl c Tra; The ate as Now ‘"te at 'Pore t