Page 14/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 25, 1984 Secretaries with know-how can get ahead United Press International NEW YORK — The secre tarial route to management is becoming more common, but being a secretary can be a re warding career in itself — if it’s approached in the right way, the author of a book for secre taries says. “A good secretary has an ex traordinary range of skills but she often doesn’t know how to capitalize on them and translate them to higher pay and a more interesting job,” Jodie Berlin Morrow said. She has translated her experience giving seminars to secretaries into “Not Just A Secretary” (Wiley Press $8.95), a book she co-authored with Myrna Lebow on how to get ahead in the field. “Secretaries have all the lead ership skills,” Morrow said. “Demand far outstrips supply and if a secretary is smart she can carve out an administrative job for herself.” Morrow uses the “she” gen der throughout the book with reason. More than 99 percent of the almost 4 million people employed as secretaries are If you're using the secretarial route to manage ment, learn everything you can about the com pany and industry you are in. The knowledge can lead to lucrative careers in sales or market- mg. 1 women. She never has been a secretary but her co-author has. Secretaries have become more assertive. They have orga nized to some extent and even have a “National Secretaries Week” this week. But there’s a long way to go. “Society still underrates her job, her boss underrates it, her com pany underrates it, and she un derrates it,” Morrow said. She said she prefers to go be yond the traditional “don’t” ap proach and concentrate on “do’s.” The book touches all bases on how a secretary can move up, or, if she likes her job. 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Morrow said the most im portant thing is to be “direct and non-conIrontational.” Here’s what she advises a sec retary to do with her future: If you are in a dead-end job she recommends looking for another one, but not just any secretarial job. “Find a field you are inter ested in,” she said. "If you have no interest in insurance, you shouldn’t look for a job as secre tary with an insurance compa ny.” Look beyond the “job” atti tude and toward a career. Find out the educational require ments or knowledge in the field you are interested in and get additional education if nec- thef essary. Be honest about your abili ties. If' you are intert home decorating, have the talent to b signer, for example, can find a job in sales. Look at your whole how you like to dress,i of people you aremosio able with. If you liketod up-to-the-minute example, you might bell working at an advert agency than at a banfi more conservative appatt vo red. “Interview your pros employer,” Morrow why the former secreianj what the firm’s policy is J motions.” Government narrows lis for nuclear waste dump Vol 79 United Press International WASHINGTON — The gov ernment plans to cut the list of potential sites for the nation’s first high-level radioactive waste dump to five or six by this sum mer, the Energy Department’s top nuclear waste official said Tuesday. The government has nine sites in six stales under study as possible locations for the under ground nuclear dump — Texas, Nevada, Louisiana, Mis sissippi, Utah and Washington. Michael Lawrence, acting di rector of the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Manage ment, said the department will release a detailed “mission plan” next month that will es tablish a schedule for partially opening the first nuclear waste storage site by 1998. But the program has been struggling and falling behind schedule as it encounters scien tific problems and major public opposition in every state under consideration. Lawrence said at a briefing he views the mission plan as a document that will lay out a rea listic schedule for developing a site to store 70,000 metric tons of waste material f rom commer cial nuclear power plants. The waste remains dangerously ra dioactive for thousands of years. “We will still end up with a 1998 (opening) date because Congress was specific and our contracts with utilities call for acceptance of waste by then,” said Lawrence. The rest of this year is critical to the program, he said, be cause the department intends to release reports by Aug. 1 that will drop three or four sites from consideration. After that, the department intends to nominate three sites by November or December, Lawrence said. Under the Nu clear Waste Policy Act, three lo cations must be nominated by Jan. 1, 1985. Those three sites will receive “detailed site characterization” to determine their suitability for the waste storage. The department reported to Congress late last year it will not be able to recommend a single site by 1990. although the law calls for the president n mend one sue to Con 1987. Under the new pi lection still will not 1990. “We’ve got to be cen technical basis for the lie,” La’ is impec After 1990, Lawrenct the schedule will proceed! geiiipoi ■ ftxas A licensing i lows: —NR 1994. —Preliminary work from 1994 to two fc sitl ?, —In 1998, the fadlitv | inoii' 11 fmerseci Lunar s Ir.iniv i . , . Brin.in l>egin partial operation,^ onulll accepting only 400 d inactive feel so 11 north" c fu Id at ihich 1 erected ■ CacU' site is “h isle per year.™ e i easing to 3,000 tons pet within five years. Lawrence said hisofikt has resolved most of itsfl emes with the NuclearM tot v Commission overe!mj )nor i mg guidelines forselectitM,,,^, waste site. ■Durit As a result, he hoi)e!. | a ,i|lon. the NRC’s approval i:JL ldr ii y guidelines by May. t’nd«K a | s u k ■r, ne: the department musti N RC concurrence for its: lection plan. Astronauts foiled by p in capture of Solar Max future ■ Teini |tmeni i fcomplet United Press International shut- 'firne .'/tner /.v,v.> SPACE CENTER, Houston — A 1-inch long fiberglass pin used to hold a thermal blanket on a sun-watching satellite al most doomed the rescue of the $245 million satellite earlier this month, astronauts said Tues day. Astronaut George “Pinky” Nelson said his initial efforts to capture the Solar Max satellite were foiled by the small pin that protruded near a steel docking pin. Nelson, using a jet backpack, flew 200 feet from the shuttle to Solar Max and planned to use a specially designed docking tool called a Trunnion Pin Attach ment Device to snap on the sa tellite and hold it steady until it could be grabbed by the tie’s robot arm. The fiberglass pin, however, prevented the I PAD from lock ing its mousetrap-like jaws onto the docking pin. “With that configuration, there was no way the TPAD would have triggered on the trunnion pin,” Nelson said dur ing a crew news conference at the Johnson Space Center. He said an investigation re vealed that drawings used by engineers to design, the TPAD failed to show the small fiberg lass pin. Nelson and fellow crewmates — Robert Crippen, Terry Hart, Dick Scobee and James “Ox” van Hoften — eventually snared the satellite with Chal lenger’s 50-foot robot arm and the crew earned its nidus the “Ace Satellite Repai pany” by repairing the and putting it back int during their six-dayfliglu Scientists said the fa satellite repair job in vaged the $245 mil Max satellite and paved lor future satellite re| space. fhe crew of the i mission showed off video tapes—justapottkj more than 3 miles worths that they took during' space voyage. ■ Cere i lorial ' Recial li a fie Roved largill l PAL |enne< follow! Bier K The crew praised thd n JVecIne The; ion of lenger for its perforniaK' suggested engineers keff mg to improve the shuttle®"" () let system. ijine ol MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. 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