Battalion/Page 9 January 27, 1983 ‘Mini-mills’ threat Alto U.S steel giants XMM Unitrd I'ri s> I uli-i ion.tl Ul] CHARLOI I K — Ameiica's ^jiant steelmakers, already fight ing a sagging economy, foreign imports and union unrest, are a compyteing challenged on yet another and vr-J ronl — competition from the ‘mini-mill.” About 60 mini-mills around irou 9 na tion — mostly in the South 'aphtc corand West — are producing some ing a reo steel products at costs well below' the giant mills, and in many rases at prices rivaling the » IEW^I a P aiiese - J ^ n< ^ h^y are making a profit doing it. ip F. Kenneth Iverson, presi- meennc ^ ent Nucor Corps, in Char- Sales ^ ott;e ' one reason his company earned $13.4 million the lirst nine months of 1982 is int Office its commitment to state-of-the- art [technology. ■piucor operates seven plants in South Carolina, Texas, Neb raska and Utah. ■Typical of the mini-mill phi losophy, Nucor concentrates its plants where it can operate with [ion-union labor and trim ship- JS H/V ping costs by serving local mar kets. Mini-mills produce special ized steel poducts in small, new and efficient factories by melt ing scrap metal in electric fur naces. Most of the major Northeast ern steel factories, which were built 20 or more years ago, pro duce their steel from raw mate rials in expensive to operate blast furnaces. Mini-mill steel is converted into Tollable billets on highly automated, continuous-casting machines that crank out ready- to-use steel in a matter of mi nutes. Nucor can produce a ton of steel in less than four hours. This compares to an average of five hours per ton in Japan and more than six hours per ton at some major U.S. plants. Iverson said Nucor produced 850 tons of steel per employee in 1982 while some of the big firms averaged less than half that amount. The typical mini-mill pro duces light steel products like construction joists, grinding balls and reinforcing rods for concrete structures. Most leave the bigger and heavier steel pro ducts to the giant mills. The mini-mills, by competi tive pricing of their specialty products, have managed to keep the Japanese from seriously penetrating their markets. Iver son, in contrast to major steel producers, favors free trade. Chaparral Steel Co., of Mid lothian, Texas, sent a 10 man steel-melting crew to Japan last year to study their steel-making methods. “We want to beat them at their own productivity game,” said Chaparral President Gordon Forward. Chaparral, which op erates one 7-year-old mill, earned $11 million last year on sales of $379 million. Several mini-mills offer work ers an incentive plan that ties earnings to output. Julie Bannantine, ..right, and Terry Wilt, both errosion. The mortar, which has been on the employed by a Houston engineering firm, test the market for only 15 years, has a chemical which mortar at Sterling C. Evans library for suspected may cause possible erosion of the mortar. Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli What In The World Would We Do Without Business? Ill teen’s custody settled y the tration Dotation, icipation Fair last ntu, Jr., for Shell i that we udents a 3 career r ith Shell 30 states :tions in i Harriett ca, Los ee career Business nost pro- and iffi- , booths, Fair are vill be ol joring in siness. ninars Ipecia! air e Should of Appli- als nounced es Mana- 'any nounced Business ’rofessor nounced ss Psychol- rounced inances" .iter and .ybrand BA Busi- nounced in Busi- r of Cor eas Pipe- nounced Some folks would have us be lieve that the world's oldest and most noble profession belongs to those who till the soil. Others would lead us to think that those who perform the healing arts de serve that distinction. Still others have other ideas. Hardly anyone would argue, however, that the world's pre dominant profession is practiced by those responsibile for meeting mankind's basic needs and wants: business people have been in busi ness since Day One. Buying and selling and trading and exhanging goods and services and informa tion the practice of business — is the one major profession that touches every person's life in the most comprehensive way. Someone has observed that by the time a person finishes break fast and arrives at the place of work (or school), that person has been served by hundreds of busi ness people. Think about that. I, for instance, had breakfast (corn flakes) this morning sent to my table by business people in Bat- tlecreek, Michigan. My hot spiced tea came to me by way of business interests in India, South America, and China. Toast was provided by business firms in North Dakota, butter from businesses in East Texas. The silverware at my table is the result of business activities in Idaho, the ceramic plates from businesses in other states. The trousers I wear (I pulled them on one leg at a time time just like everyone else) came to me from a business firm in North Carolina, my shoes from New Mexico. I had been awakened by an electronic device from New York, music from California. I motored to the Innovation Theme of Banquet Mr. Roy Serpa will be the fea tured speaker at the 1983 Career Fair Banquet, slated for Tuesday evening at the main banquet room of the MSC. Mr. Serpa is currently the Manager of Headquarters Commercial Development for Gulf Oil Chemicals Company. He will be speaking on Innovation and En- treprenuership. Mr. Serpa is responsible for the direction of all commercial de velopment activities and new busi ness ventures at Gulf. He began his career as a chemical salesman and for the past fifteen years has held several marketing, business development, and general man agement positions. During the past ten years, Mr. Serpa has been extensively in volved with new business ven tures, technology transfer on an international basis, and with ac quisitions. He has presented sev eral lectures and articles about marketing, business develop ment, the free enterprise system, and on multinational firms and their impact on international affairs. A graduate of the Southeastern Massachusetts University with a B.S. Degree in Chemistry, he also received his Master's Degree in Business Administration from the University of Pittsburgh. Mr. Serpa is a member of the American Management Associa tion and the Commercial Develop ment Association. He is active in the United Way and the Project Business Program of Junior Achievement. office in a device assembled by a business in Dallas, Texas. And so by the time I arrived at my desk I had enjoyed benefits supplied by hundreds of business people. And to think about it further, the checks I had written to pay for each product or service has circu lated through an amazing econo mic network in a fascinating eco nomic system that is based primar ily on trust! One human being trusting his needs and wants to the business activities of hundreds of other peo ple! And they in turn trusting their economic security to my hand written note of payment. Business, of course, is much more than that. But without those key ingredients of mutual trust and service between people, there just couldn't be many business transactions. Business is a people- oriented profession. And the study of Business Administration, also, is much more than it appears on the sur face. Maybe that is why we have started an annual "BUSINESS WEEK" at Texas A&M University. We'd like to let you experience some of the excitement of the pro fession. We'd like to let you in on HAPPY HOUR 5-7 Mon.-Thurs. 4:30-6:30 Fri. Sat. 11-5 Mon.-Sat. 10-Closing OPEN 11-11 Mon.-Thurs. 11-12 Fri.-Sat. 11-2:30 Sunday Brunch 5-10 Sunday IJVTERURBA1V MONDAY—Sorority Night ! Bring in your greek letters and drink all night for half-price!!! WEDNESDAY—Ladies Night! All ladies’ drinks half-price from 5 till closing!! INTERURBAN EATING HOUSE 846-8741 505 University Drive Fourth Annual Career Fair Banquet “A Dead Whale or a Stove Bolt” Mr. Roy Serpa, Gulf Chemicals speaking Sit With The Company Of Your Choice Tickets on Sale Today and Tomorrow ONLY!! $5.00 admission some of the inside skills and know ledge and information involved in business professions. And we'd like to invite you to meet and visit with some caring and interesting business people. The Annual Business Career Fair is an excellent opportunity for students and faculty members to become acquainted with profes sionals representing specific businesses and industries. The sharing of information and the establishing of continuing re lationships between the university ''and the business community pro vides many benefits for all con cerned. BUSINESS WEEK '83 at Texas A&M University begins Monday, January 31 and runs through Fri day, February 4. The College of Business Administration is happy to be your host to numerous events. Participate in those of in terest to you, as listed in the sche dules elsewhere in this special edi tion of the business students' newsletter, "The Business." Lynn Zimmermann, Assistant to the Dean The Business is published by the undergraduate Business Student Council as a monthly newsletter for students and student organiza tions of the College of Business Administration at„ Texas A&M University. It is financed by volun tary non—tax—supported pro jects and activities of the Business Student Council. "The Business" offices and student organization offices are located in room 101 of the A&A building, telephone 713/ 845—1320. The Business: Student Editor - Clyde L. Wright, III; Staff Editor - Susan DuBois; Council President - Susie Brandt; Council Staff Advisor - Lynn Zimmer mann; Dean of the College - Dr. William V. Muse. SPECIAL STUDENT HEALTH CLUB MEMBERSHIP Now is the time to get in shape with a student health club membership at Royal Oaks Racquet Club. The cost is only $16 per month plus a one time $50 initiation fee and you can suspend the membership and dues for three month's each summer. Racquetball courts can be rented by student members on an as available basis for a low court fee. For further information call 846-8724. ROYAL. OAKS RACQUET CLUB 4455 CARTER CREEK PARKWAY 846-8788 iiiiiiiiiimiiimiimNimiiimimiiimimiiiiimmimimimmiimmiimmimMMmiimNmiiimiiiiiimiiimiiiimmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiimiiimiH United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — A cou ple succeeded in their two-year court battle to gain custody of a teenage victim of Down’s syn drome whose parents refused him medical treatment, but doc tors say too much time may have lapsed for a lifesaving opera tion. The state Court of Appeal Tuesday granted custody of Phillip Becker, 16, to Herbert and Patsy Heath of San Jose, Calif. The Heaths battled with Phil lip’s natural parents, Warren and Patricia Becker of Los Altos, Calif., for custody of the child after the Beckers refused to allow doctors to perform an ex ploratory heart catheterization to see whether Phillip needed corrective surgery. “The Heaths are ecstatic,” Jay Spear, the Heaths’ lawyer, said Tuesday night. “But the ques tion over whether he can have the heart catheterization test still remains. “The only way it will be re solved is if and when the Califor nia Supreme Court rules on the case.” Phillip was born with Down’s syndrome, a genetic disease that causes mental retardation, often accompanied by physical abnor malities including heart defects. Without the surgery, the Heaths argued, Phillip would live only into his 30s. The Beck ers said they did not want to pro long his life beyond their own life expectancy because he might not have anyone to take care of him. The exploratory surgery may now be a moot issue because doctors believe Phillip has grown too large for the opera tion to have any benefit, the court said. Spear echoed that concern. “He has a progressive dis order,” he said. “In 1977, when the first tests were done they showed that he was operable. Today, doctors are not sure that is still the case.” In making the Tuesday deci sion, the court decided that re moving Phillip from the psycho logically supportive atmosphere in the Heath’s home would have a severe effect on the boy who earlier showed signs of stress when removed from the Heath’s care. The court said Phillip’s fre quent visits to the Heath’s home “provided an adequate founda tion to establish the crucial pa rent-child relationship.” The Heaths met Phillip in 1972 when they worked as volunteers for the We Care home for the mentally retarded in San Jose. They began taking him home for visits. The Beckers, who institution alized Phillip soon after his birth, did not visit him often and refused to pursue medical treat ments for him when they be came aware of his condition, the court said. “The record contains abun dant evidence (the Becker’s) re tention of custody would cause Phillip profound emotional harm,” Justice John T. Racanelli wrote.