Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1979 WHEN YOU BUY A CALCULATOR, THINK ABOUT WHO’S GOING TO TAKE CARE OF IT. ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY ANNOUNCES THE BEGINNING OF ITS At Loupot’s, We’re One of The State’s Largest Calculator Dealers For A Reason — We Look Out For Our Customers. Buy A Calculator From Lou. If Anything Goes Wrong With It Within 30 Days, He’ll Replace It With A New One. Or Loan You Another Calculator Free While Yours Is Being Repaired. Our Business Is Built On Friendship — Isn’t That The Way It Should Be? SPRING RUSH 1979 LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE NORTHGATE ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE FOR A PARTY SCHEDULE AND MORE INFORMATION CALL 693-7676 693-2596 693-5446 ATTENTION ALL 1979 WHO’S WHO APPOINTEES Individual photos for the Who’s Who section of the 1979 Aggieland will be taken beginning Monday, February 5. Photos will be taken every half hour be tween the hours of 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. MWF, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Tuesdays, and 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Satur days and Sundays. To make an appointment, call Student Publica tions at 845-2611. Please be sure to have a choice as where you want your photo taken. We’re looking for the best graduates in the nation. That’s why we’re interviewing at Texas A&M University. 'SpgemJ. "*•**‘7 'V-- ... . ***** We’ve grown because we ve made it a practice to employ the brightest, most capable people available. Which is exacdy why we’re coming here. We’re Halliburton Services, the largest oil field service company in the world. We provide a full range of highly technical, extremely complex services to the petroleum and other industries. This visit, we’re interviewing for positions in the following areas of our business: Field Engineering Manufacturing or Plant Engineering Research and Development Equipment Engineering Increasingly, our customers —both major and independent petroleum companies—rely on the skills of our engineers to engineer oil and gas well cementing, stimulation, and remedial services. As a field engineer, you’ll be responsible for thoroughly analyzing the needs of your customer’s well, engineering the service or treatment design, presenting your recommendations to your customer, marshalling the equipment necessary to perform the service, and supervising the Halliburton personnel on the job. Field engineering demands an individual with excellent engineering abilities and who is willing to accept tremendous responsibility within a few months of joining Halliburton. To maintain our exacting quality standards Halliburton manufactures the vast majority of the equipment we use in providing our services. To keep up with booming demands we operate several manufacturing facilities in the U.S. and abroad. We offer a unique challenge because our work involves both long production runs and job shop operations. As an engineer in this department, your responsibilities can range from developing manufacturing procedures for a new product to evaluating quality control procedures. Individuals selected for manufacturing opportunities must have a high degree of technical ability, the personality to work effectively with people, and a healthy dose of horse sense. A major reason for Halliburton’s leadership position is the constant flow of new products, techniques, and procedures from our Research and Development Departments. The departments are widely recognized as both the most productive and the largest of their type in the world. The departments function in four basic areas —Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical, and Tools. Several different professional disciplines are required. Eventually you’ll be assigned primary responsibility for an entire project. It is a position that requires an individual with a unique understanding of how to practically apply theoretical concepts, able to communicate with field personnel, and who enjoys the challenge of expanding an entire industry’s technological base. One important reason for our leadership in oil field services is the rugged dependability of our equipment. Virtually every piece of service equipment we use is designed and built by Halliburton people. As an equipment engineer, you’ll be given responsibility for a specific project. That responsibility will include all engineering, introducing your product to Halliburton field personnel, and trouble shooting in the field. You’ll take charge of the complete project from inception to successful field performance. Equipment engineering demands an individual who is able to cross interdisciplinary lines, who can work well with other engineers and non-technical people, and who has the ability to communicate well. Sign up now at the placement office. On campus interviews February 8. Halliburton Services personnel will be on campus to interview candidates for positions in these areas: Field Engineering Manufacturing Engineering Research & Development Equipment Engineering Agricultural Engmeering Aerospace Engineering Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Industrial Engineering Nuclear Engineering Petroleum Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Aerospace Engineering Mechanical Engineering Nuclear Engineering Agricultural Engineering Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Electrical Engineering Computer Science Physics Chemistry Rock or Fracture Mechanics Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Agricultural Engineering If you are unable to interview when we’re on campus, please send a copy of your resume to: Bill Baker, Recruiting Coordinator, Drawer 1431, Duncan OK 73533. HALLIBURTON SERVICES $ Duncan, Okla. 73533 A HALLIBURTON Company Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Davis jury vote told Juror says 4 conned United Press International HOUSTON — One of the eight jurors who contended T. Cullen Davis was guilty of solicitation of murder says the dissenting jurors were conned by the millionaire’s re spectable image and the presenta tion of his defense. Despite an oath not to reveal which way the jury had voted, James W. Morrison Tuesday revealed the breakdown of the jury that deliber ated through 43 hours and 14 votes without reaching a verdict, causing a mistrial to be declared. “They wanted to believe Davis is respectable and therefore he’s got a nice lawyer and the good guys couldn’t possible be the bad guys,’’ Morrison said. “I think this guy is a walking bomb. I guess there’s a lot of people in Fort Worth who think so, too. Morrison said jury foreman Mary Carter, 47, a medical secretary, and jurors Vera Miller, 57, a personnel stenographer; Helen M. Hill, 47, a bookkeeper, and Charles Franks, 31, an engineer, resisted conviction. He hinted defense lawyer Richard “Racehorse” Haynes’s sex appeal was a key. “They would not admit to being taken in by him,” Morrison said. “We confronted them with that. They were quick to say no’ — maybe a little too quick.” Morrison said the tapes convinced him of Davis’s guilt. “For me, it had to be guilty. The tapes were the all-important thing,” Morrison said. “They said MeCrory controlled the conversations. He didn’t really. It isn’t necessarily the guy who makes the most noise. “As far as the rest of us were con cerned, when they talked about kill ing people, that’s what they meant. ” “The people who were (voting) not guilty pretty much believed Davis’s story and they believed Karen Mas ter’s story about the FBI, Morrison said, referring to testimony from the defendant’s mistress that he was telephoned by the FBI. Davis testified he cooperated with MeCrory in making audio tapes about murder for pay because the GOP chooses Detroit in ’80 FBI told him McCrorywasi tion suspect and he should along.” Morrison, 50, a mt technologist, said Franks’s was “a good deal weaker I women’s and was based o about Davis’ friend-tin informant and chief accuser,) MeCrory. “H is was based on the facttl thought MeCrory’s story wasil Morrison said. Morrison said defense “made reasonable doubt looll very formidable thing.” Morrison said some jurorsdi understand the concept of i able doubt. “The people who understand! the people who are usedtonj decisions and sticking by them,' said. “One person kept sayind doubt, and that’s not true. Other jurors stuck to a ment not to disclose or con split. Helen Farmer, 48, uift| NASA employee, said Morris sending reporters “down trails” with disclosures not be true. “I wouldn’t put too muchsti Jim Morrison’s statements, say we were honor bound, right. He’s trying to confuse don’t think it’s right to namem Farmer said. Doyle teach Dr. M. promotes cational I cation Tr Texas Ei Service. Butler education Oklahom; also rece: in trade a and a bac trial arts He joir Engineer July 1971 tor of th Area School’s [ years. In add penence educatior expenens JO. 1 \new tr j.o. L HeJ Profes United Press Intel-national DETROIT — The Republican Party picked a city on the rebound — symbolic of its own presidential hopes — for its 1980 national conven tion. City fathers said they felt the GOP decision will help Detroit shed its lingering image as a center of crime and racial unrest and add momentum to its drive towards revitalization. State Republican officials said it also could improve the image of the GOP. “The decision to hold the convention in the Renaissance City will help focus national attention on the progress which we have made in revitalizing our urban areas and will underscore the resurgence of the Republican Party, Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken said. “It will emphasize the fact that just as Detroit is being rejuvenated, the Republican Party is being rejuvenated. Milliken, who was vacationing in the Virgin Islands, worked closely with Mayor Coleman A. Young to secure the GOP bid, which was announced Tuesday in Washington. Young, a vice chairman of the National Democratic Committee and one of President Carter’s closest black supporters, said he will now concentrate on securing the Democratic convention for Detroit. Auto magnate Henry Ford II, a major supporter of the new downtown Renaissance Center complex that features a 1,200-room hotel, said he also will try to convince Democrats "that Detroit is the place to be in 1980. The Republican convention will begin July 14, 1980, at spacious Coho Hall, which can seat 4,400 delegates and alternates and more than 12,000 spectators. The Democrats are expected to hold their convention the following month. At a news conference Tuesday, Young posed with a photograph that showed him riding a zoo elephant — symbol of the GOP. He boasted that Detroit, despite its poor national image, is one of the country’s five leading convention cities. “Through this national convention, the entire world will see that Detroit, which once was declared dead, is indeed alive and well and that we have recovered from the maladies of our past,” he said. Peoples Temple dissolved w By R] Ba tudents ire of the i ing skills in tl 'University p ■Dr. Clam professor, sai ofihigh schoc Most college ness, and are rect it. ” WGibson re mouth surve ‘versify Engl the United S ini the unde Hulum. ■Gibson for ’80 General Glass Meeting ’80 Thurs., Jan. 25, 7:30 p.m. Rudder Rm. 607 Agenda: Final vote on class gift Junior Ball Spring Picnic United Press International SAN FRANCISCO-Th death of the Peoples Templei Tuesday at the end of a shortly in a crowded City Hall court! Superior Court Judge Ira granted a petition for dissok the church after a 30-minute a Attorney' Charles Garry W the petition saying the siii murder ritual at Jonestoi Guyana was, for all practid poses, the end of the churcl. Brown also agreed to begins ing for a receiver to distrihi 1 $12 million in known assets I |d universi Rev. Jim Jones s church | er the The Emergency Relief tee, composed of other „ . California religious organiniL^j was asked to submit a plan in to bring to California for bin remaining bodies of the 913p| who died last November in™ town. The State of California was! sented by Deputy Attorney Yeoryios Apallas who didn to dissolution of the churd] suggested appointmentofarf Brown said he had nooneis| for the receivership but won |e demand: Everyon 11s,” he sa eer or bu: ite mon he’ll be in j at deman posals, r< e of wri He.” he study Sere an inc but the come suggestions from attorn™, r, h volved in the petition and othd^Ka-i filed against the Peoples -> The judge also ordered thalK^ fr( m other suits against the ML f ... Temple to be stayed. bj? f Apallas said he was told State Department that 639j bodies flown from Guyana to Del. had been identified, those had been claimed by rel He said there were 274 hi unidentified — 210 of whicl children — and that 599 main at Dover awaiting burii The Emergency Relief tee was given 30 days to sal plan for the transfer andintei the bodies. The judge’s order inci placement of newspaper creditors, which he said w® done “as quickly as we can, E^ON OPPORTUNITIES IN LET S DISCUSS YOU and EXXON OPPORTUNITIES EXPLORATION—Oil, Gas and other resources. PRODUCTION—Oil, Gas and other resources. PETROLEUM REFINING CHEMICALS MANUFACTURING TECHNICAL SALES AND SERVICES RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING—Exploration and Production. RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING—Fundamental, Procassas, Products, Project Management. OPEN NOOSE January 30th 7:30 P.M. ROOM 206 MSC Come Discuss Your Opportunities at Exxon BRING YOUR SPOUSE ENGINEERS We are equal opportunity employers and solicit interviews with qualified students without regard to race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin, handicap, or status as a disabled veteran or veteran of the Vietnam era. Non-citizens will not be interviewed unless they present a permanent immigrant visa number.