t'l I Page 4 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1981 Local By BARBIE WOELFEL Battalion Staff The label on many meat and poultry products may give you more information than you’d ever want. It may list the quantity of a meat USDA demands specific information for consumers Label tells everything you want to know and more or poultry in a can of soup or may supply special instructions for cooking or food storage. All foods containing more than 3 percent fresh meat or 2 percent chicken are subject to inspection for labeling by the U.S. Depart- r Computer Science & Electrical Engineering Majors ... ROLM, with locations in the San Francisco Bay Area and Austin, Texas seeks talented individuals interested in: SOFTWARE Real-Time Distributed Computing Operating System Data Base Management Systems Data Communications Diagnostics Electronic Mail Software Tools: Compilers, Debuggers, etc. Test Engineering HARDWARE • Data Communications • Digital and Analog Design • Microprocessor Applications • Telephony • Switching Power Supply Design • Production Engineering • Test Engineering ROLM Corporation develops and manufactures state-of-the-art computer software and hardware for integrated voice and data office communica tions systems. ROLM has grown 50%-100% each year since 1969 and currently has 4400 employees. Included in ROLM’s outstanding benefits package is a three-month paid sabbatical after six years (and every seven years thereafter) and Company- Paid Tuition for graduate study at local univer sities. On Campus Interviews Tuesday, November 3 Meet with working Software and Hardware Engineers from ROLM in the Placement Center. See our Company Literature in the Placement Center. If unable to attend an interview, send resume to: Gibson Anderson, Manager, Recruiting & Training, ROLM Corporation, 4900 Old Ironsides Drive, M/S 560, Santa Clara, CA 95050. We are an equal opportunity/ affirmative action employer. ment of Agriculture. Before they are used, all labels must be submitted for approval to the USDA’s Food Safety and Quantity Service label review staff, said Dr. N.B. Isom of the USDA Food Safety Inspection Service in Dallas. “Inspectors in processing plants verify that products con form with approval labels,” Isom said. The product name, ingredients, USDA inspection mark, net quan tity and special handling instruc tions must appear on all labels for products containing the meat and poultry percentages. The product name must be de fined by a USDA standard, but can also be the product’s common, usual or descriptive name, Isom said. However, the name cannot be false or misleading. “A product labeled ‘beef and gravy’ must contain at least 50 per cent cooked beef, but one labeled ‘gravy and beef must contain a minimum of 35 percent cooked beef,” he said. Product ingredients must be listed on the label in descending order according to weight. Preser vatives, artificial colors and flavor ings are also included on the label. “A USDA inspection mark must appear on all packaged meat or poultry products that have been federally inspected and approved for wholesomeness,” Isom said. The measurements of the pro duct’s net quantity mvist be stated in pounds and/or ounces. The con tainer’s weight is not included as part of net weight. Required conventional weights may be co-listed with additional metric equivalents, Isom said. Special handling instructions are also required on labels of per ishable products. For example, the words “keep refrigerated” or “keep frozen” are required on labels for foods requiring refriger ation or freezing. “Nutrition labeling is not man datory for meat and poultry pro ducts, but some companies dis play it voluntarily,” Isom said. If nutritional information is pro vided on the label, the following should be included: size of the serving expressed in common household terms (i.e. ounces, cups, slices and pieces); number of servings per container; number of calories per container; number of grams of protein, carbohydrate and fat per serving; the percen tage of U.S. recommended daily allowances of protein, five vita mins and two minerals per serving. Dennis Ivey's Lakeview Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing" Thursday “Nickle Beer Aright!” Cover I $2.00 Person Lone Star Draft Beer SC a cup or $1.00 a pitcher (We also serve Cone Star Longnecks!) Music by Dennis Ivey and “The Waymen” Saturday THE DENNIS IVEY BAND with Special Guest CURTIS POTTER Doors Open S p.m. Dancing 9 p.m.-l a.m. label. checks the soup can label. The listing ingredients and percentages of Staff photo by Daniel Sanil8i| vitamins and minerals, is required by U.S. Department of Agriculture. Pneumonia dangerous, fifth largest killer Despite an increase in the use of antibiotics, pneumonia is the fifth most dangerous killer in the nation, the Texas Medical Associa tion says. Death from pneumonia follows heart disease, cancer, stroke and accidents. Among patients over a 20% OFF I can offer 20% savings on auto insurance if you qualify. Call or stop by to see your fast, fair, friendly farmers agent for details. RON ALLEN, Agent 707 Texas Avenue Suite 110-A 696-9351 50, the pneumonia death rate is nearly 50 percent. Pneumonia, an infection of hu man lungs’ air sacs, can result from many different viruses, bacteria, fungi, toxins and chemicals. The disease sometimes develops after cold or flu, and can also be caused by inhaling noxious gases. The most common form of pneumonia, pneumococcal pneumonia, is fatal, with 500,000 cases each year in the United States. Of these, 5 to 10 percent are fatal, according to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectioni Diseases. However, the pneumonia d toll has been reduced in the three years, thanks to ne« pneumonia vaccines. Several ml lion people have received the vac cine since its introduction over two years ago. The vaccine has been shown to be 80 percent efec tive in preventing many types 0! bacterial pneumonia. It is recommended that vaccina tions be received before the coll and flu seasons begin during Sep tember and October, said Charles Webb, M. D., chief of the Bureaa of Epidemiology at the Texas De partment of Health in Austin. “The vaccine is recommended by the federal government for al high-risk people,’ Webb sail “This includes the elderly, people whose spleens have been re moved (and are therefore more subject to infection), those will chronic respiratory or heart dis eases, diabetes, cirrhosis an! Hodgkin’s, disease.” The pneumonia vaccine has been recognized as an importanl preventive health measure, espe cially for the elderly. The federal government recently made the vaccine one of a few preventive health benefits covered by Medi care, making it more affordable for older citizens. Texa areer I Stud shook a ivited ti lays shi ireer c niversi Abou ected ti •irector yd Tr Repo 'om 10 < arious I 'om 9 a 'resenta rarious ( "8 The Bi The 1 di-brass ‘eir sp< Basic t ★★★★★★★★ MSC TOWN HALL PRESENTS CHARLEY PRIDE FRIDAY Oct. 30th 8 p.m. OPTION PASS PERIOD IS OCT. 12-16. GENERAL ADMISSION ON SALE OCT. 19-30. TICKET PRICES: $6.50 — General Admission $7.75 & $8.75 — Reserved TICKETS AVAILABLE AT RUDDER BOX OFFICE 845-2916 High to The qi ftsembl Ch 19(6, is toi U «ra ar Bittee. Bunding ‘nd Dav layer : »ston S Chari E Gra nee the We terr Mei pla< can