ational THE BATTALION MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1981 Page 7 What’s up at Texas A&M b Sebrtt ey art Tihed, s ipointtr : the IK MONDAY PLACEMENT ORIENTATION: Will be held at 10a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. in 401 Rudder. The session is sponsored by the Career Planning and Placement Center. DEPARTMENT OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES: Applica tions now available for 1982 Cotton Bowl Representative at the Student Activities Office Nov. 2 throught Nov. 16 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in 221 MSG. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS: Square dancing will be held in 212 MSC from 7 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. EXTRAMURAL SECRETARIES: Meeting at 6:30 p.m. in ' 162 E. Kyle. PHI ET A SIGMA: Induction of new members and yearbook pictures of all active members will be at 6:30 p.m. in 701 Rudder Tower. DELTA “If': Club presents Jo Ann Hudson from the Speech and Communications Department at 7 p.m. in 302 Rudder Tower. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL: Old Testament study at the University Lutheran Chapel, 315 N. College Main, College Station at 8 p.m. COLLEGIATE 4-H CLUB: Business meeting to discuss Houston Livestock Show booth at 7:30 p.m. in 113 Kleberg. JOHNSON COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Meeting to discuss finances and plan November social activities at 8 p.m. in 504 Rudder Tower. TAMU TRAP AND SKEET CLUB: Meeting in 109 Military Sciences at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. All persons interested please attend. Pictures will be taken in the MSC lobby at 8.T5 p.m. after the meeting. TAMU HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION: General business meet at 7 p.m. in 115 Kleberg. ACCOUNTING SOCIETY': “Transition into the working world with business representatives at 7 p.m. in 102 Aeade- mie and Agencies. TUESDAY CLASS OF ’82: The decoration committee for the class ball will meet at 7:30 p. in. at 310 Keathley Hall. PLACEMENT ORIENTATION: Will be held at 10 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. in 401 Rudder Tower. The session is sponsored by the Career Planning and Placement Center. DEPARTMENT OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES: Applica tions now available at the Student Activities Office for 1982 Cotton Bowl Representative from Nov.2 through Nov. 16 between 8 a.in. and 5 p.m. TAMU TRAP AND SKEET CLUB: Meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 109 Military Sciences. All persons interested please attend. MSC ARTS COMMITTEE: General meeting in 402 Rudder MSC HOSPITALITY FASHION SHOW: Modeling cos tumes from Madrigal Dinners in the MSC lounge at 10 a.m. MSC BASEMENT: Meeting in 401 Rudder Tower at 7 p.m. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA HONOR SOCIETY: Meeting will speak af 7:30 p.m. in 110 Harrington Classroom Center. SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS: Howard H Hinson of Texas Pacific Oil will speak on “Oil Companies in the 80Y* at 7 p.m. in 102 Zaehrv (Engineering Center). AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL EN GINEERS: Speakers on industrial engineers in banking will be at 7:30p.m. in 103 Zachry (EngineeringCenter). Aggieland pictures will be taken before the meeting. ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN IN SCIENCE: Resource Management: Science or Whimsy?'’ by Dr. E. L. Venrick, assistant research oceanographer from Scripps Institute of Oceanography, will be at 7:30 p.m. in 501 Rudder Tower. SAILING TEAM: Meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 305 Physics. MANAGEMENT SOCIETY: General meeting with speaker from the Placement Center at 7:30 p.m. in 114 Academic and Agencies. STUDY ABROAD, MORTAR BOARD, LAMBDA SIG MA: Overseas Day from noon until 2 p.m. in 206 MSC. Open house to recruit Texas A&M students for overseas travel, study and internship. UNDERGRADUATE ENTOMOLOGY CLUB: Dr Frank Gilstrap will speak on the Medfiy at 7:30 p.m. in 102 SCSE. Aggieland pictures will be taken afterward. Ill ANNUAL ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE SERIES TOGETHER WITH DEPT. OF BIOLOGY AND THE GRADUATE COLLEGE: Presents Topics in Pleis tocene Extinctions “Late Pleistocene Vertebrate Communi ties in the Southwest” by Dr. Ernest L. Lundelius, Jr. from the University of Texas at 2 p.m. in 501 Rudder Tower. STUDENT Y’ ASSOCIATION; Concessions Committee will have a meeting at 7 p.m. in 216 MSG at the SPO. Anyone interested in working on the Christmas candy project is urged to attend. SNOW SKI CLUB: Meeting to discuss trip details and a film at 7:30 p.m. in 350 MSC. AMERICAN FOUNDRYMEN’S SOCIETY: Discussion of production and workshop in J.S. Thompson Hall (old ME shops). Cancer society and FTC would rather fight than quit United Press International NEW YORK — The American Cancer Society board voted Satur day to join the Federal Trade Commission in a search for bigger, better and more numerous health hazard warnings on cigarette packages. The new attack on the reservoir of ignorance about the dangers of smoking was proposed during closing sessions of the four-day ACS annual meeting. The 117- member board voted in the prop osal. The proposal was part of a re port from the Committee on Tobacco and Cancer. It was out lined in the draft of a letter of com ment on an FTC staff report claim ing present warnings on cigarette packs are worn out and ineffec tive. The Tobacco Institute was not immediately available for com ment on the proposal. Excerpts from the draft of the letter that will be sent to the FTC: —“The ACS is willing to work with the FTC to create and test a series of powerful warning labels for cigarette packages and adver tising.’ —“The ACS recognizes that the size of warning labels is too mod est, that the current message is much too imprecise, and certainly too familiar — as the FTC report shows. It is, indeed, worn out.” —“The ACS believes that a stronger design is required to make a warning label visible and effective, that it should be made larger than at present, and that multiple specific warnings rotated in sequence or at random would probably be more effective than any single warning, no matter how detailed the latter might be.” —“It is shocking to learn from the FTC report that about 20 per cent of the American public, or 30 million adults, do not even know that smoking causes cancer. Forty percent, 60 million people, do not know that smoking causes most lung cancer.” ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE MAJORS If you are interested in teacher certification in agricul ture while pursuing your current degree, meet with us on November 9 or 10 at 7 p.m. in room 101 of Scoates Hall. This 30 minute meeting will answer your ques tions. For advance information — call Dr. Herman Brown or Dr. Gary Briers at 845-2951. .imert'i mnafe re was i ( win!: nflation causes Nowyouknow ligh jobless rate United Press International There are approximately 41 mil- lion dogs and 23 million cats in the f A United States. “ na y United Press International ■ WASHINGTON — An unem- pl jment rate of 8 percent. More J;m8.5million Americans unable llfindwork with another 1 million lo discouraged to look. ■ithe White House calls the dis- lal figures a “natural short-term msenuence of unwinding the peply rooted inflation that is im- plded in the American eco- ifcmy. I Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- lassachusetts, says they indicate VIA p he worst economic mess since ■e Great Depression” — the re- ICS lilt of a “schizophrenic economic IJolicy of combining a tax cut with ujtight money policy. AFL-CIO President Lane jrkland also blames President Reagan s, economic policies. He ills those on the unemployed ills “victims of this engineered cession. The October unemployment fi bres released Friday by the abor Department were expected wtfobe higher than September, but |ot many observers expected the jatetojump from 7.5 percent to 8 lercent. ^ i I The number of unemployed f I pas the highest since the depart- aent began its current method of mining data in 1947, eclipsing Jhe previous high of 8,398,000 in May 1975. It meant that 1 million workers jecame unemployed since July, lushing the jobless rate higher han any time during President Darter’s administration and well ibove 7.4 percent when Reagan ook office. Unemployment rose in all ma- or categories, particularly among ilue-collar workers. In the hard- lit construction industry, 18 per- ■ ent of workers were out ofa job in Ictober. Teenage unemployment also increased to 20.6 percent, up 1.3 percentage points — highest in six years. Among black teenagers aged 16 to 19, 46.3 percent were out of work. Nevertheless, the White House announced that the “administra tion will not adopt quick fix mea sures to deal with short-run move ments in the unemployment rate.” The statement said: “Elements of the president s economic prog ram already in place are sufficient to provide the basis for a strong and lasting economic recovery which we anticipate will be evi dent in 1982.” On Capitol Hill, Labor Secret ary Raymond Donovan refused to appear before a Joint Economic Committee hearing to discuss the matter, saying he did not want to make any “snap judgments, which instant analysis would necessi tate.” Rep. Parren Mitchell, D- Maryland, who chaired the hear ing, forecast a 9 percent unem ployment rate before the current recession ends. oooooooooooooooo HANDMADE HLMS Pramo -TIME-/ BANDITS ...they didn’t make history, they stole it! / a HANDMADE FILMS Thru . GAVCO EfVIBASSV/nRICTURES i 000000000000001 Huber impacts on America! Join us... for a meaningful career. £l|PS luiauiure or ruoDe rp le coming soon! "Endless Love" (R) ..the FRONTRUNNER for this year's Oscar for best motion picture." Rusty Cawley-The EVCS Eagle MERYL STREEP JEREMY IRONS; jhejrencti h TODAY 7:20-9:40 Corner of U niversity & College Avenue Open 7:00 846-6714 Discount Tickets Accepted Dudley Moore Liza MkineNi ;pGj Arthur TODAY 7:30-9:30 Millions of pounds of Huber Carbon Black are used each year in the manufacture of rubber products and tires. Huber Oil Field Equipment manufactures equipment for drilling, pipeline and petrochemical storage industries worldwide. Huber also produces oil & gas...inks utilized by newspaper and magazine publishers...clay for the paper industry...chemicals ...timber and minerals...and calcium carbonate used in making paper, plastics, and paints. Total annual sales approach a half-billion dollars, and are moving up fast. You can make a real contribution—and benefit accordingly. We’ll be interviewing on campus Friday, November 13, 1981 Our representative will be on campus to interview Mechanical and Chemical Engineering graduates for fulltime positions in West Texas and Gulf Coast locations—the heart of the Sunbelt. If selected, you’ll enjoy the widest possible range of respon sibilities within a short time.. .and you’ll enjoy competitive salary and top benefits that include almost immediate profit-sharing. • Company literature and details are available at the Placement Office right now. For your interview, please register soon at the Placement Office. • We’re an equal opportunity employer M/F. J.M. Huber Corporation PO Box 2831, Borger, Texas 79007 Tuck School at Dartmouth College Where graduate education in management began. The Amos Tuck School of Busi ness Administration is the oldest graduate school of business in the United States. It was founded at Dartmouth College in 1900 and continues to be a leader in the business of educating managers. From its inception, Tuck School has offered only the Masters Degree. This exclusive focus, combined with its small size, offers a personalized approach to profes sional management education which is distinctive among the leading business schools. The residential nature of the program and close student-faculty inter action further enhance the quality of the learning experience. Tuck School is living proof that a leading business school need not be located in a big city. While Ex- ecutives-in-Residence and other representatives of the business community form a steady stream of visitors to the School, Tuck students enjoy the fine facilities of Dartmouth College in the beautiful New England setting of Hanover, NH. The problems of city life can be put aside —at least temporarily — in favor of academic concerns. During the past year, more than 190 companies sent representa tives to Tuck to recruit from its 140 graduating students. (A Placement Report is included in the Tuck Bulletin.) And each year, 25 managers from industry come to Career Expo, a two-day symposium, to share their know ledge and experience in their re spective fields. Numerous guest speakers participate in the class room throughout the year, and distinguished overseers contribute their expertise to the direction of the School. Access to Boston and New York is easy. Both cities are served by interstate highways and bus. Amtrak provides service to and from New York and a scheduled airline flies to Boston from Leb anon, NH, a few miles from Hanover. If you are interested in learning more about the Tuck MBA Pro gram, make plans to speak on campus with the following Tuck School admissions representative: at Career Day Carl Treleaven, Tuck '77 Admissions Representative Saturday, November 21 Check with Career Planning & Placement Center • 845-6551 pick up your Aggieland ’81 at the COMMONS between 8:30 a«iti« and 4:30 p.m. through Wednesday and while you’re thinking Aggieland for be sure to GET SHOT! Aggieland ’82