Wednesday, August 10,1983/The Battalion/Page 3 A&M exception to rule Job offers expected to fall by Eric Evan Lee Battalion Reporter Although job offers will be fewer this year than in the past, Texas A&M students seeking jobs will not be harmed by the decline, Judy Vulliet, an assis tant director of the Texas A&M Career Planning and Placement Center, says. Vulliet said many companies have halted hiring until the eco nomy improves. Companies with a hiring freeze, she said, have been asked not to interview for jobs at Texas A&M unless they have or plan to have jobs available. Last semester, Vulliet said, some companies interviewed students but did not have any job openings. With the economy down, many companies are bypassing interviewing at smaller colleges and universities and going only to the schools where they re ceived the best applicants in the past. Vulliet said Texas A&M re cruiting will not be affected much by the cutbacks. Texas A&M received about 25 percent of all job offers reported in the Southwest last semester. The placement center pub lishes a booklet containing names and addresses of com panies that interviewed students the previous year. The booklet, “Career Plan ning and Placement Center Annual Review,” also lists statis tics and national averages of salaries in each major. Vulliet said engineering, computer science and medical majors will have the best chances of getting jobs this year. A report by the Coordinating Board confirms part of what Vil- liet said, stating that students in computing science, data proces sing and medicine will be in de mand for the coming year. However, the board’s report stated that job openings in en gineering, a major usually in de mand, have diminished some since the board’s 1981 study. Fine arts, liberal arts and so cial science graduates will, according to the report, find the market for jobs competitive. Manpower Inc., a temporary service firm that publishes quar terly reports on the job market, conducted a poll of almost 12,000 employers in 348 U.S. cities. They reported that the job outlook is good for industrial, construction, manufacturing and service industries. Computer camp covers basics by Bill Conaway Battalion Reporter On Aug. 14, some Texas high school students will arrive at Texas A&M for a summer camp. They’re not coming here to play but to work. They will be learning about computers. The camp, which is for stu dents aged 12 to 16, is the first computer camp for high school students sponsored by the Office of Continuing Educa tion-Liberal Arts, Annie Ruth Taylor, the office’s coordinator, says. Information about the com puter camp was sent to public schools throughout the state and of the 50 openings offered by the camp, 20 have been filled, she said. The cost of the camp is $350. Students will be taught how to write computer programs and the basic computer program ming languages. The camp is a self-paced workshop, Taylor said, so stu dents can start at their own level. The students will use the Ap ple II Plus computers in the Learning Resources Depart ment of the Sterling C. Evans Library. Faculty and staff from the computing science and math departments will be instructing and supervising the students, Taylor said. The students will stay in the dorms during the eight-day camp. Move Yburself, All Your Stuff, And Save, Too! That’s about right photo by Kathleen Hart Dr. Dan Taylor, a chemical from Clairmont, Calif., performs llngineering professor, watches as an experiment for his unit Craig Ruecker, a graduate student operations lab. lallas sheriffs investigated r illegal airline tickets use It’s as easy as renting a Ryder truck, one way, Compare costs before you make plans for moving at the end of the semester. 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MOf* 216 N. Main Bryan 779-2786 Post Oak Mall College Station 764-0010 w r ne, Ronnit' hat if we' Central ■ /adorwills |; in their bat her.” act finale. >r a second quarantine lerican tn us put on the audien 11 United Press International jLAS—The Dallas Coun- ■tor’s office submitted the icsof 43 sheriffs deputies to tioiities investigating (he gal use of discount or free air /el tickets. At least 13 deputies partici- Hin the American Airlines ms ticket program and were npensated for their travel by p«ers, authorities con ned. jThe remaining 30 officers id American tickets sometime epast year but may not have 'i| advantage of the bonus Bvhich offers discount rates epuent travelers. Assistant Distict Attorney Mark Goldstucker said he will use the information this week to obtain complete ticket histories from the airline. The 13 officers traveled on taxpayer’s money for the de partment’s fugitive division, which returns prisoners to Dallas. Rryan s Newest! 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