The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 30, 1981, Image 8

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    Page 8
THE BATTALION
MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1981
Local / State
New secretaries learn skills at clerical workshop De
By LAURA YOUNG
Battalion Reporter
The job of a secretary is more
than typing, filing and fixing, as
Dolly Parton sings, “a cup of ambi
tion” for her boss.
, It involves knowing her job,
and
her co-workers, her boss
especially her environment.
Several new secretaries at
Texas A&M University had the
chance to learn more about their
environment and brush up on
office skills at the Basic Secretarial
■Y
...Before You lake
Ybur Next Step
Right now everyone is pressing you to make a career
decision...immediately. Your parents, your teachers,
even the people next door are urging you to make up
your mind about exactly what you want to do with
your life. In the back of your mind you may feel that if
you don’t act now, you may be shut out from the
right opportunity.
Instead of the old “hard sell”, we at NL Industries
want to help you make the right decision by urging
you to slow down before you take that next big step.
NL Industries is a diversified company with major
divisions in oilfield equipment, petroleum services,
chemicals and metals. We have a variety of oppor
tunities for graduating students with the following
degrees:
Industrial/Manufacturing Enginaering
Mechanical Engineering
Masters Business Administration
Accounting/Finance
Sales/Marketing
We will be on campus interviewing for career posi
tions on =
Tuesday and Wednesday, March 31 and April 1
Slow down and take the time to look into your future
with NL Industries. You just may be able to end your
search right here.
If you are unable to visit with us, please send your
resume to Susan Nolingberg at the address below:
NL Industries
1900 West Loop South
Suite 1500
Houston, Texas 77027
and Clerical Workshop held
March 25-26 in Rudder Tower.
The workshop is one of the Per
sonnel Departments employee
development training programs.
The department sponsors a total of
11 workshops for Texas A&M em
ployees designed to provide em-
, ployee training assistance.
The secretarial workshop pro
vides an introduction to Texas
A&M for new secretaries and also
covers basic secretarial and cleric-
| al skills.
“You need to be able to see the
large picture as well as the small
[picture,” Nancy Gustke, training
specialist in the personnel depart
ment, said.
Gustke conducts the secretarial
workshop once a month along with
another workshop on office proce
dures.
Gustke said the secretarial
workshop has been going on for
quite a few years here at Texas
A&M and they’re almost always
booked up.
“We usually try to limit the
workshops,” Gustke said.
“They’re all open to anybody who
wants to come but they get filled
up fast.”
Such things as Aggie traditions,
library services, recreational faci
lities, entertainment, sports
events, MSC craft classes and
Free University were explained.
Secretarial basics such as tele
phone courtesies and methods,
taking messages, campus mail and
organization were also discussed.
“Lots of things are covered at
those workshops and you always
figure if there’s one or two things
you can take back, that’s some
thing that you didn’t have before,”
Gustke said.
Gustke also listed twelve ways
to start out right on a new job, a list
taken from Glamour magazine:
— Don’t gossip about history,
— Concentrate on discovering
your boss’s priorities,
— Accept your boss’s manage
rial system,
— Don’t have special expecta
tions for a woman boss,
— Make your boss look good,
— Don’t expect this job to du
plicate your old job,
— Listen and watch,
— Ask questions,
— Get the boss to arrange
training for you,
— Avoid past mistakes,
— Don’t be taken in by first
impressions,
— Be optimistic and go out of
your way to express that positive
attitude.
Gustke explained that com
munication is a vital part of a good
secretary-boss relationship.
“A lot of negative things can
happen in your office because of
lack of communication," Gustke
said.
Gustke said the purpose of the
secretarial workshop is to provide
information about Texas A&M to
new employees.
“They’re mostly to give new
people ... an idea of things that are
... peculiar to Texas A&M Univer
sity,” Gustke said. “Even if they
worked at another university,
they do things here that are diffe
rent.”
The workshop also provides, to
those who are new to being secre-
United
taries, a chance to learaim::
out the job.
The personnel departs:
also beginning two new ;■
shops, Positive Discipline J
How to File a TAMU Media,
surance Claim. i' HOI T V
“The Positive Disciplines;- . i '
shop is for managers if they lij ni ht p J 0]
ha -V d,scl P I, " ar y (1 « of troubled
with their employees, « th
said. “Its so theylllearnb ^^
do it the right wav. T when t j
Gustke said, “Not all®( annual exti
ties have as an extensive I® joined b;
program as we have here Reagan, w
“Some private companie|Pj as a
some kind of internal trainiip m dustry
some of them will just paylafl “ , ' r
emnlovees to take traininem P res identii
employees tot
their company.” KBscar cere
a president
awards pre
lin D. Roos
Texas A&M to observe Library Weel
inH941.
[Althougl
ated, it w
appearance
By SUSAN DITTMAN
Battalion Reporter
Bluegrass music, folk dancing
and a drama will be some of the
activities of National Library
Week at Texas A&M University’s
Evans Library. There is no charge
for any of the programs.
Other events being held in
observance of National Library
Week are a panel discussion on
energy, a book sale and a series of
videotapes.
The National Library Week
program was started in 1958 to
focus public attention on reading
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• Automatic sorting and collating
• Sharp, clear, permanent print
KlNKO’S also provides a complete binding
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3.11
OPEN
Mon.-Frl.
7:30 to 5:30
Sat.
8:00 to 12 Noon
PILGER
TIRE &
AUTOMOTIVE
CENTER
400 University Drive East • 696-1729 • College Station
“We Appreciate Your Business"
as a source of personal fulfillment,
according to library information.
National Library Week has
been celebrated at Texas A&M for
about the last 10 years, said Joan
Kuklinski, the head of the 1981
National Library Week Com
mittee.
“In the past we’ve had speak
ers, poetry readings by local poet
ry societies and musical perform
ances,” Kuklinski said.
"This will be The King’s En
glish musical group’s second year
in a row to perform,” she said.
The library’s annual book sale
began about five years ago, she
said.
“The hooks (on sale) are books
the library already has in its collec
tions or has weeded from its col
lections for one reason or
another,” Kuklinski said.
“The expenses for National
Library Week are generated from
the profits made by the book sale,”
Kuklinski said. “Last year we
made around $700.”
Kuklinski said part of the money
goes to replenish the paperback
hook supply for light reading
while the rest goes to help fund
the next year’s National Library
Week.
The events scheduled for the
week of April 6 in the Evans Lib
rary are:
April 6: The Texas A&M
theater arts department will pre
sent an act from Oscar Wilde’s
“The Importance of Being Ear
nest” at 2 p.m. in rooms 204B and
204G.
v^April 7: The King's English, a
group of English department fa
culty members
bluegrass music, will playj-Kobert I
p.m. in the sunken readinaYorker v
on the second floor. f: 1 1
v*'April 8: A panel disci®- WOOCi, lo
energy is scheduled for3<: fo f a ]
in rooms 204B and 204C „ r
Oscar to
April 9: The Texas AMw, ,
temational Folk Dancers#-!;
form at 8:15 p.m. in tkewon't sht
reading area on the secondijg
*'*PrillO:-n 1 eliK» Sc()tt> he
booksale will be from 10 a d
p.m. on the library concouni|
the main entrance. ftyvard.s jj,
*>All week: A sene when he ap
videotapes on topics range the Screen
Flash Gordon to the Ire® diking a fib
Tutankhamen will he ska- ran upsidec
tinuously from 10 a.m. toll Robert L
daily in the vestibule ton' who shuns I
Loophole
oil progn
is used
sure bet tc
Oscar for
he probabl
Marlon Bn
Scott, he ju
Loi
suit
\Ne*re tooting
our own horn . . .
Battalion
Classifieds
Call 845-2611
ENGINEERING CAREER
OPPORTUNITY
Since our beginning in 1936, Dames & Moore
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the world. We are multi-disciplined specializ
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If you possess an appropriate master’s with
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studies, or meteorology, then JOIN US ON
CAMPUS APRIL 6, 1981, at your Placement
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OR WRITE:
Dames & Moore
United Press IntcrnalM
DALLAS — Dozens ok]
ducers have been taking
tage of a $1 billion loopWf:
Energy Department United
originally created to emr^^LEXAN
investments in risky andaffaly be usee
sive techniques toextracter * s h only to t
from old fields. achieve an
The program expired w tem, said fe
end of crude oil price contr;
January 28, but Energy I can ass
inent regulations allowed use bu
companies two extra moit Jieecssary,
which to qualify for reiral hearing calk
ments, the Dallas Times il |P su bmit da
reported Sunday. |r^ es consl
Oil firms have been nA s y stem -
submit claims for pre-paidtoY Superint
projects that won’t even beg son t(, bl Sc
til next year. fijpkcup of i
In addition, produars ! j!® nc ant U P C
been seeking reimbursemer T 16 s,lri °uni
which can total as mucb ! . art “ad i
million per project—to bad' In ^8 rate . h
jects that under decontrol c cott ’ w ‘'
virtually certain to be prod- ? con trover
with the subsidy. for “early a
“These expenditures an e ^ re ^, 1 ° n
the kind we were tryingtoe* . n , saK e
•• • i c n ln the case,
age, said Energy DepaT Th j ,
lawyer Ben McRae. ‘Theprf . J k
was not to help people so
projects that would be
anyway.
“People are takingadvai
a loophope in the regulat* ^ des cm
if everything is doneexactly th( , action
regulations, it is comf
legal.”
Once department official
ized the problem, theyy
the two-month extension) '
but only 12 days before!
scheduled to end, h
Before the early cfc
however, producers qu:
at least $1 billion from tfej
ram, which wasdes
tertiary production. Terti®!
duction seeks to squeeze
from depleted wells,
to achieve
settled in cc
Alexand
Berry and P
filed the si
rsc Ai
J. Robert Lawson
445 So. Figueroa, Suite 3500
Los Angeles, CA 90071
An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
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