Page 6 THE BATTALION MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1981 Local / Features ‘Almost Anything Goes”at RHA fundraiser By RUTH M. DALY Battalion Reporter The crowd was silent. Everyone held his breath as the golf balls were expertly escorted to their final resting places. Sound like the U.S. Open? Close, but not quite. It was the final event in Sun day’s “Almost Anything Goes” competition, sponsored by the Residence Hall Association to be nefit the Brazos County United Way campaign. The game that the crowd was watching so intently was not regu lar golf. Golf balls were used but were carried on spoons. Each member of the four teams that made it to the finals had to carry the golf-ball-on-a-spoon in his mouth as he made his way through an obstacle course without letting the ball fall off the spoon. This atypical golf game was typical of all the games played at the RHA event that raised $ 100 for the United Way. Twelve teams, each made up of five men and five women, partici pated in the preliminary events, games adapted from grade school games. For example, in the beach ball carry, two team members had to carry a beach ball between them and manuever through an obstacle course. The ball could be held be tween them by anything but their hands. As if this wasn’t hard enough, contestants had to manu ever through the maze walking backwards. - vL* vL* yL* vL*' vL* vL* PJs. ^y^ *^y* «y'* -y^ *y^ 'U* *y^ *y>» »y^ * * * * In the dizzy-dash relay, each team member had to spin around ten times, then run 10 yards to another team member who repe ated the action. , TIRED OF COOKING t * * * 6* * * * * -X- * * WASHING DISHES? * * * * In the circle dash, team mem bers had to transport an orange from neck to neck without touching the fruit with their hands. After this phase of the com petition, they had to run arm-in arm about 30 yards and stack themselves into a pyramid. * * * * * * ■jf * * * -* * •* •* * * * * * * can MSC each | anyone ^ prepare a meal for as little * as $2.19 plus tax? You will * Then dine at the evening. How find, the answer at the MSC * from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. each evening. “QUALITY FIRST” Blind man’s bluff was the basis of the quick shave competition. Each female contestant was blind folded and then shaved a male member of her team (using the blade of a plastic knife, of course). She then fed him a cup of jello and was given directions to a bell that she had to ring. The first team to have all five women contestants ring the bell won the event. drive Texas Office of Traffic Safety PROGRAMMER/ANALYSTS - HOUSTON, TEXAS Hughes Tool Company will interview Computing Science and Mathematics degree candidates and Business Administration or Economics majors with six or more hours of Data Processing coursework Thursday, October 8, 1981. Candidates will interview for positions as Programmer/Analysts at Corporate Headquarters in Houston, Texas. Hughes Tool utilizes state-of-the-art hardware and software - IBM 3033 mainframe using MVS, CICS, TSO and JES2 supporting at large teleproces sing network. Primary languages are COBOL and Mark IV utilizing on-line editing, testing and inter-active debugging. Excellent opportunities for ad vancement in a professional environment. Register at the Career Planning and Placement Center, 10th floor Rudder Tower. Paul Egner, left, gets a little overcoated with shaving cream by blindfolded Carol Deeken in the quick shave competition. West Texas oil boom fuel job, housing problems United Press International The oil boom has caught up with West Texas. While the oil and gas industry is fueling the area economy, it also is gobbling up the work force. Local businessmen are battling wage spirals and a competitive job market. Community leader^ are struggling with acute housing shortages. “We knew that with industrial development there would be (job) displacement,” said Winston Wrinkle, president of the Big Spring Chamber of Commerce. “The oil field pay scale for unskil led labor is now up to $5 an hour. Every one else has to keep up with that scale — either with improved benefits or bonuses.” In a recent meeting with Wrinkle and other town officials, several employers expressed con cern for the top wages the oil in dustry is willing to pay. Phil Neighbors, industrial de velopment director of the West Texas Chamber of Commerce, said, “In general, people move to ward jobs that pay better and oil and gas does pay better in west Texas,” he said. “Technical and semi-technical jobs in oil are booming.” Neighbors said inquiries about an oil field roughneck training school in Abilene have been so numerous that the Chamber of Commerce, which is sponsoring the school, hired two full-time employees to handle phone calls from “all over the country.” Another problem spa®: the oil boom is ahousingsb Critical in some areas, si Midland and Odessa, thesis is aggravating the labor ps P 0S( you etls | ^ 01 deci The mak mak Si drav C QUESTIONS? CAREER CHOICE SEMINAR September 28 Engineering Architecture October 5 Science Agriculture October 12 Business Education Where: Zach 103 When: 7-8:30 p.m Cost: 500 *Anyone can Attend!! Collegiate 4-H MEETING Monday, Sept. 28 7:30 p.m. Room 113 Kleberg Center Program: "4-H" besides creating headachti own. “The key to the w housing,’’ Taylor said. “Wlj to slow down on the develi and get some housing id Neighbors agrees, but out that high interest rate preventing new housing^ ments. Until the rates come Neighbors said, some to® relying on temporary, pa cated housing. The Weil Chamber of Commerce helping out by advising con: ties on solutions to the ski N eighbors also is concer; out future problems West may face when the oil and terest wanes. “The boom in the oil industry will not continue and communities need to k their base of industrial oppf ties,” he said. Neighbors recently e ■ from a trip to the Midwest, he met with 160 industn sentatives interested in reb or opening branch area. “We’re after new pajP just new workers,’ not help but be optimi® only from the energy- 11 standpoint, but because® creasing the manufacture; and service industries, look is good.” Tudent NMENT M UNIVERSITY JUDICIAL BOARD INTERVIEWS 2 GRADUATES 2 JUNIORS 2 SENIORS 2 SOPHOMORES Duties include constitutional, legislative and elec® regulations interpretations as granted by the Studef Body Constitution and University Rules and Regult tions. APPLY BY 5 P.M. MON. SEPT. 28 216 C MSC Dr char app ( Aca< forn ship the A was Acar the i latio univ ernr dea\ D and A&J Scie dent Phy; His >ng i T1 enti; Stat< are into and] bian tuck D Coll, Lea\ Privi Or. of F] *org W the ( searc A6c\ Soho, PrivE Ject. Mth Hass ofge e con ubj(