Did you have a picture taken at your last party? If so, Jan. 21-25th is our reorder week. Order any picture from a 1984 party this week for a special discount.... PHOTO SYSTEMS Incorporated -and- PARTY PICS • RHA Halloween • Greekfest • Bourbon Street Bash • All Dorm Parties • Any Sorority or Fraternity Parties • RHA Casino Party • Pikefest • And Many Others Call For More Info... 693<8181 COUPON GET ONE FREE PICTURE FOR EVERY $10 PURCHASE offer expires 1-25-85 Page 14/The Battalion/Friday, January 25, 1985 El l VrijQ 1 V. . . Ifl^ _ TDC needs major additions in staff Associated Press HUNTSVILLE — The Texas De partment of Corrections needs an “astronomical number” of staff addi tions in order to shape up the the na tion’s second-largest prison system, director Raymond Procunier said Thursday. Ray Keller of Duncanville, chair man of the state House Committee on Law Enforcement, meanwhile, estitnated it could cost up to a half billion dollars before the prison sys tem is put in order. “I’m pleased with the im provements,” Keller said after he and about a dozen other lawmakers inspected several prison facilities in the Huntsville area. Keller’s Law Enforcement Com mittee and members of the House Committee on Criminal Jurispru dence were briefed by Procunier and other top department officials, then visited tne Ellis, Ferguson and Eastham prison units. “It’s a miracle we have had as few problems as we have,” Procunier said. “And 1 know that sounds strange,” he added, referring to prison disturbances and hundreds of inmate stabbings over the past year. Procunier, who has been on the job for about nine months, ex plained for legislators how he reor ganized the administration of each prison unit, how he is reclassifying inmates so similar prisoners are housed together, and what chal lenges faced him when he arrived. “There was not one department procedure in a procedure manual,” he said. Now, he said, 25 training captains are on the job to make sure people know procedures. “We are hopeless optimists,” he said. “I have never seen a better atti tude.” Procunier said the major prob lem, and the reason he needs more staff, was the elimination of the sys tem of building tenders — inmates who guarded inmates. “All 1 know is the old system is ille gal,” he said. “The ‘con boss’ system is not bad. It’s just illegal.” The building lenders were re placed by guards, he said, but ad ministrators failed to take into con sideration that the inmate building tenders were on the scene 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and each guard was not. “Everyone in Texas felt every prison was maximum security. But they are really lightweight to me dium security,” he said. “With the building tenders, they were maxi mum security.” It takes five guards to replace each building tender, he said. The staff shortage was so acute in mates were enroute to the new Beto I Unit when he discovered not enough staff was available at the new prison. Procunier ordered the bus turned around. “It’s so frustrating,” he said. "We were adding facilities to prisons but no staff. We’ve got gymnasiums in fallow because tnt staff.” lere’s not enough Slouch By Jim Earle “/’m sorry I missed your last class, but / was visiting with mi I academic adviser to see how I could improve my grades.’' * Jan. 21, 1985 Paid Advertising by the College of Business Vol. 7 No. 4 Annual Business Week set for February Career Fair Committees 1985 By VIVIAN SMITH Reporter The sixth annual “Business Week” in the College of Business Administration will “showcase” Texas A&M business stu dents to 70-80 companies from across Texas, said Dr. Samuel Gillespie, Assis tant Dean of the College of B usiness Ad ministration. “Business Week heightens campus and community awareness of the College of Business Administration, and company recruiters’ awareness, by getting student- sand faculty interacting with the iep- resentatives,” Gillespie said. Sponsored by the Business Student Council (BSC), the Week is a student- managed event. Assistant to the Dean Lynn Zimmermann said. BSC is comprised of representatives from all of the business oriented student organizations on campus. These mem bers form committees which organize and conduct the week’s activities. “This gives students the opportunity to plan, manage and carry out major pro jects using skills they have learned in the, classroom,” Zimmermann said. The council began its planning in Au gust. The week’s activities are fairly con sistent from year to year, Zimmermann said. It opens February 4th with the Retail ing Career Symposium and representa tives of all otner industries and business professions join the fair for the second clay, February 5th. The representatives of the companies will be at booths in the Blocker lobby to talk with several thou sand students about their respective com pany. The representatives also provide fac ulty with valuable input about classes needed to properly prepare students for specific business careers, Zimmermann said. A reception is held on the first evening arid a career banquet on the second to al low many students the opportunity to visit personally with company recruiters. On tne final evening company represen tatives take outstanding students to din ner at a local restaurant. Zimmermann said he is very pleased with company response to the Career Fair. In 1980, the first year of the fair, 27 companies participated. Each year that number has grown and for the 1985 Fair 75-80 companies are expected. P hi Companies are paying a higher fee to participate this year, yet the , tlie number of businesses attending increased. Gilles pie uses economics to explain the in crease: “In economics if you raise the rice and the demand still increases you rave a superior good. “Business Student Council runs a first class event,” Gillespie said. From com ments he has received no other program at any major southern university mea sures up to the quality and scope of Texas A&M’s, Gillespie said. Other activities planned for the week include: seminars in accounting, market ing, finance, management, business anal ysis and retailing.Professors invite va rious corporate executives to speak to their classes. A Women’s Business Symposium will be held on Thursday, February 7th. The week concludes with the Masters of Business Administration case competi tion. All Southwest Conference schools send teams to compete in a 100-page case study of a complex business problem and offer solutions, Zimmermann said. One of the features that makes A&M’s Business Career Fair unique is the fact that it is entirely student man aged. All events held during the week are planned and run entirely by stu dents.This is where every student, no matter what major or classification, fits in. Any business major can serve on one or more of the Career Fair committees. Serving on a committee gives students a better opportunity to meet and talk with the representatives of the various companies. It also gives valuable experience in the areas of management, public relations, and people skills. Many students that have participated in the past have received job offers from the compoanies that they hosted. If you are interested in serving on a committee for this year’s fair, there is still time to get involved. Sign up sheet s are located in Room 101 of the Blocker Building or the chairman of the committee you wish to serve on may be contacted. It’s not too late to still become in volved in one of the biggest events of the College of Business. The Fair is only two weeks away, so come on out and GET INVOLVED! Banquet— Bryan Griggs 260— 3587 Jim Bohling 696—3528 Booths— Kim Peattie 823—7764 Correspondence— Tia Tomlin 260—1809 Hospitality— Leigh Ann Seeburger 693—1340 Gwen Knebel 696—0339 Publicity— Sharon Howerton 846—9401 ' Reception— Kyle Coldren 696— 6707 Security— Rodger Woika 696— 5650 Tickets— Martin Rimes 693—2520 Welcoming— Wanda Drapela 260—7580 Texas A&M’s Career Fair 1985 Companies planning for Career Fair 1985 booths By LINDA SCARMARDO Reporter The 1985 Business Career Fair offers mutual benefits to companies, students and the University. Seventy - five companies plan to reap the benefits offered by the 1985 Business Career Fair, which is sponsored by the Business Student Council on February 4th - 6th. The Fair, an annual event, is a major part of the College of Business Adminis tration’s observance of “Business Week” on campus. Participating companies have the op tion of attending the Fair/for one or two days, and have a limited space for booths in the lobby and hallways of the Blocker Building. Booths are not only to display com- Ticket Sales Tickets for the 1985 Career Fair Banquet will go on sale Monday, January 28th at 8 a.m. in the lobby of Blocker. Tickets will be $6.50 each. The banquet will be at 7 p.m. at the Brazos Center with a Cash Bar at 5:30 p.m. Seats will each company will be on a first come — first serve basis. If you wish to sit with aspecific com pany, buy your ticket early. Sales will close on Friday, Feb ruary 1st at 5 p.m. pany information, but also to give stu dents a casual location to talk with rep resentatives. While companies have different ways of presenting information, their reasons for attending are basically the same. “We’re there to meet the students and to plant seeds of interest in our programs in the future,” George C. Berger, of Tandy Corporation/Radio Shack, said. “At the minimum we will have a very col orful display booth which shows employ ment opportunities at Radio Shack. The booth will be staffed by representatives from our personnel division, who will participate in all other functions,” he said. Texas A&M Alumnus Rick Philpott, said Luby’s Cafeteria representatives will not only attend the Fair but will also in terview students February 6th and 7th. “We get good results and quality students from A&M,” he^said. Pennzoil will keep it fairly simple, rep resentative Jackie Birkel said. “Basically, we will have literature in our booth and answer questions. We want to try to in form students early about opportunities at Pennzoil and about what college courses they need to be taking,” she said. Birkel said that their recruiting efforts are aimed primarily at those in Business Analysis (BANA). Pam Estes, from First City Bank in Houston, said, “We’re conservative. We don’t really go into all the whoop-la. We just plan on handing out brochures and answering questions.” Whatever companies plan on doing, Business Career Fair should be an excel lent opportunity to interact with prospec tive employers. Frank Cinatl and Amy Wolan, graduates of A&M, return to Career Fair 1984 as company reps. By KAREN BLOCH Reporter Representatives of 65-70 compa nies will be manning booths in the Blocker Building’s first floor lobby on February 5th and 6th from 8:15 a.m. to noon and 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Sixth Annual Business Career Fair at Texas A&M is sponsored by the Business Student Council. The Business Career Fair gives em ployers an edge in recruiting and stu dents an edge in job-hunting. Stu dents can talk with representatives of any of the companies attending the fair. But the Fair is not just for graduat ing seniors. It also provides a time and place for freshmen, sophomores, and juniors to have career discussions with professionals from many fields. At the Business Career Fair rep resentatives of the participating com panies have the opportunity to visit informally with students. These infor mal visits can lead to interviews and serious recruiting. Representatives talk to the under classmen about the company, the in dustry and their professions. They try to assist the students in making deci sions about their careers. Several companies, including Ex xon, InterFirst Bank and Luby’s Cafe terias, will be making return visits at this year’s fair. Each company has different rea sons for returning, but they all enjoy the contact with the students. “The Fair is a medium in which we can get information to students on an informal basis,” Wayne Tinsley, of Exxon, said. “We primarily try to get sophomores and juniors interested in the company so when they start inter viewing they’ll want to talk to us.” Jon Lamb of InterFirst Bank in Austin, agrees with Tinsley. “We have the opportunity to visit with many more students at the Ca reer Fair than we would normally be able to,” Lamb said. “Career Fair gives us a chance to recruit students who might not think they're interested in banking.” Rick Philpott, of Luby’s Cafeterias, said he likes the public relations as pect of the Fair. “The Career Fair is good exposure for the company,” Philpott said. “We do some advertising at A&M, but we like to be able to talk to the students one on one. That way they can get the facts from us.” Since the Fair is planned and man aged entirely by business students, it offers the opportunity for valuable “hands on” experience. But that’s not all the Business Ca reer Fair has to offer. At 9 a.m. on February 4th in Rud der Tower the Center for Retailing Studies will present a symposium on “Careers in Retailing.” Other seminars will be presented during the week. Some seminars will be geared toward undergraduates, others will focus on interests of mas ters students. Speakers will discuss the careers that are available to students majoring in business analysis, market ing, management, finance and ac counting. The highlight of the Fair is the an nual banquet at which academic achievement awards are presented to students. The Banquet is at 7 p.m. on Tuesday February 5th at the Brazos Center. A special feature of the Fair is the “Take a Student to Dinner” program. This is a special opportunity for re cruiters to select specific students to be their guests at dinner on Wednes day evening. The Fair opens on Monday Feb ruary 4th with a reception for recruit ers and student leaders. Hr ^ wB. INY AOS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. 'o maner what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big jol). Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611