etc Battalion/Page 10A September 16,1982 Warped by Scott McCullar System mm SHUGART COUPON um Sat. Sept. 18 Photo Hours 9-7 Now you know Gibson Discount Center 1420 Texas Avenue 19 r, United Press International Hold enough gasoline tO fill the The Piei're Guillaumat, the tanks of nearly 10 million aver- world’s largest oil tanker, can age-sized American cars. V WALLET SIZE COLOR PORTRAITS ,994 V* ASK ^ l IFIBIIH } Extra charge \8 X 10/ for GROUPS BlS x 10/ VOFFfK / cricketeer: TAILORED WOMAN Investment suitings for fall. Featuring meticu lous tailoring and natural shoulder shaping. In beau tiful all wool • > * fabrics, plus the classic styling of Cricketeer Tailored Woman. It’s elegant, tradi tional clothing, created with an eye for richness, a sense of purpose. CULPEPPER PLAZA Layaway/VISA/Master Charge/Am. Express DO YOU LIKE TO HELP OTHERS? FALL “BANANA SPLIT & BLUE JEANS” RUSH Thursday, Sept. 16 Room #230-231 MSG 6:30 p.m. Please call us for more info: Jan Cooper 260-6354 Jan Hargrove 260-6352 Meredith Pike 696-0679 OMEGA PHI ALPHA National Service Sorority (continued from page 1) system to fit their needs. “The system we are now operating under, which is a patchwork of what we started with in ’69, is just about patch- worked out.” Shoup agreed. “It’s Band-Aid upon Band- Aid,” he said. “If you look at the system we’re now using, it’s state-of-the-art for about 10 to 15 years ago at most universities. We probably outgrew it when it ceased to be state-of-the-art.” The changes in the Purdue registration system since Texas A&M’s purchase of the program support this, he said. Purdue redesigned its prog ram to use scanning sheets in 1972, Assistant Registrar Camil la Lawson said, and that system was replaced three semesters ago with on-line computer regis tration. In the newest system, the student’s schedule is keyed into the computer while he waits and immediate feedback is given on the availability of classes, she said. Shoup said: “We’re two generations away from state-of- the-art.” Massey said changes at the Data Processing Center, from which the University leases com puter time to run its programs, also have forced the search for a new registration package. “We are primarily a card re gistration system,” he said. “The DPC is phasing out its card reading system.” The registrar’s office has spent the last 14 months exten sively researching alternative re gistration systems, Lacey said. V. Thomas Rhyne, coordina tor of computing for the Univer sity, said it was important to re search all possible systems to get exactly what the University needs and wants. Shoup said he hopes the Uni versity moves quickly to get a new system. “We need to be careful that we don’t overstudy the problem at the expense of getting on with the activity,” he said. “Probably buying a system that is not quite as good as we could get is not as devastating as buying no system at all. “I’m not suggesting that we run out and buy the first thing that comes along; however, the need is very, very strong, and YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN OFFICER'S COMMISSION IN THE ARMY. Your BSN means you’re a professional. In the Army, it also means you’re an officer. You start as a full-fledged member of our medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Burbank, CA 91510. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BEALLYOUCANBE. You Can Catch The Wave. A MOONLIGHT MADNESS r All Spring and Summer Merchandise reduced to Vz off or below Thursday 6-9 p.m. Only 20% Off Choice Fall Items Friday, September 24 At Advanced Micro Devices, we’re getting really good at what we do, and we’re doing the right things the right way. We’re on the leading edge of every critical technology in the semiconductor industry. There’s still a lot more to do before we’re Number One. If you’re good at what you do, talk to AMD and Catch th& Wave. With your MBA, BS, MS or PhD in Electrical Engineering, Solid State Physics, Materials Science, or Computer Science, you can catch the wave with Advanced Micro Devices. AMD’s wave carries the most exciting career opportunities in the semiconductor industry with a company that just passed $300 million in sales, and has its sights set on being a Fortune 500 company. Make an interview appointment at your Career Planning and Placement Center. Or, if you can’t make it on the above date, send your resume to Barbara Toothman, College Relations Manager, Dept. CN-TAM-924, Advanced Micro Devices, 901 Thompson Place, Sunnyvale, California 94086. Advanced Micro Devices An equal opportunity employer m/f/h. often you can upgrade or im prove a system if it has some basic capabilities to it.” Rhyne said the University is “moving as fast as we can to do the right kind of thing.” He said the new registration system must be approved by the registrar’s office, his office, Van diver, the System Information Management and Policy Com mittee, Hansen, the Texas A&M System Board of Regents and Info the Automated Information Systems Advisory Committee, a nine-member panel in Austin that must approve computer appropriations for state institu tions. Because of the approval pro cedure, Rhyne predicted a new system couldn’t he implemented before the 1984 fall semester. Shoup said he would hate to see it take that long. “We’ve already seen a great deal of deterioration in what’s happening, and we’ll see con tinued deterioration in the qual ity of student interactions if that were to take place,” he said. Associate Dean of Liberal Arts Candida Lutes said she didn’t know if the current sys tem could last two years. “But on the other hand,” she said, “it’s held up so long already with so many Band-aids on it that I suppose if we have to deal with it that much longer, we will. But we’ll be griping about it for the next two or three years while we wait, and students will con tinue to have problems with it.” Lacey said the system chosen would provide for on-line regis tration. But he said it hasn’t been decided if the computer termin als will be located in the depart ment offices, the deans’ offices or the registration headquar ters. “Right now, our planning re volves around getting the soft ware for the kind of system we want,” he said. The cost of such a software package could run from $350,000 to $500,000, Massey said. Support is great for on-line registration. Associate Dean of Agricul ture Dwayne A. Suter said: “Our advisers and faculty are strongly urging an on-line system with terminals in the departments.” Suter said he would prefer that kind of system to one in which the computer terminals would be located in the registra tion headquarters. “The only disadvantage! to that (terminals in theregis tion headquarters) is that if particular grouping of coi that have been agreed upoi the adviser and the studei not workable, the student h: go back to the departi again,” he said. On-line registration coidd help the colleges planning changes, Lutess If deans knew at theeni the first day of registration course was full and another empty, she said, they could fie personnel and classroom add new sections and others. “Right now, I think m problem that the feedback partment heads and deans slow that they can’t realii by Jot uni Aggie liege vv irsof d 1 rk test* As ju /is lay d the d |oes mi ine hac “In a g don’t thin alter the schedule,” she saidj.^j " in r**»vn**nt’* ■CntlHl- becomes set in cement.” _ An on-line system also shi 1 . 01 !! 1 reduce errors. Carter said. R , a 1 Human error causes mo® 1 . re on the problems in the currentj£' c ’ P" tern, he said. I budl a “It’s easy to blame thecomfif ,lta ter,” he said, "but the faultiB r . tec 11 with the computer.” Bckei Students, faculty and theW 1 th pie pulling class cards usi», 0l ! 1 '' fillip ic4.j.i vcn via responsible for mislj^. a , ( . .1®turnt P\ and s.nl tthat li ter at during registration, he saH ® An on-line system oR, . point out errors immediai "" Carter said, wouldn’t have to wait untilL next day to see if a mistaken"’ ai !- ( u 1 i ■ v ’e to h been made. ■ . , ■wis, wl Everyone agrees an on*ith a kn system woidd cut the times® But tl in the registration process. Mays b About 20 percent of thefirdenoi faculty members spend onrc®t it. n ation could he saved witkB"! gue on-line system, Gillespie s® Students also could see as stantial decrease in the amoj of time spent registering j classes, he said. Lawson said Purdue’s sy: has cut the time students si in registration from aboutt! hours to 10 minutes. “There would beastreat ing,” Shoup said. “Morethoi than time, it would save a' headaches and ill feeling on part of the people involve^^.j the process — both the studei y j - and the advisers. It’saveryB^f^.^ trating procedure now at l®j n ot ^ and it’s a pity the system Iniij be driven bv the hard" rather than by the need.” ie men pSam at ednesc itierre Today’s almanac United Press International Today is Thursday, Sept. 16, the 259th day of 1982 with 106 to follow. The moon is approaching its new phase. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mer cury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. American historian Francis Parkman was born on Sept. 16, 1823. On this date in history: In 1630, the Massachusetts village of Shawmut changed its name to Boston. In 1893, more than 100,000 people rushed to the Cherokee Strip in Oklahoma as the area was opened to homesteading In 1963, the Asian nation Malaysia was created, occupyu the southern portion of tl Malay Peninsula and the nortt ern part of Borneo. The couM is the world’s largest producer rubber. R In 1974, President offered conditional amnesty Vietnam draft dodgers at evaders. He said they come home if they perfon up to two years of public senitt coi A thought for the day: Amt: ican author and humorist Mad Twain (Samuel Clemens) San “There are several good prow tions against temptation buttk surest is cowardice.’ Relax, Have Fun, Ei\joy if* Enter a new wonderful world of excitement. The atmosphere is different — the perfect setting for your favorite cocktails! And what food! The menu offers a variety that all the family will enjoy. Popular prices, too. Discover Julie’s Place soon it’s the kind of restaurant that makes you want to come back again and again. 607 Texas Ave. College Station Phone: 696-1427 Open every day — Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails F S BU the Tl