Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, September 26, 1988 yont caitti in, btaati^u,/ S o ut/ti'in, Calico laici with the SOUTH COAST AIR QUALITY MANAGEMENT DISTRICT California's largest regional air pollution control agency has entry-level positions open for: Chemical Engineer* Metallurgical Engineers Mechanical Engineers Environmental Engineers Petroleum Engineers The salary range Is from $30,751 to $38,095 per year. Excellent Advancement Opportunities The South Coast Air Quality Management District operates the most comprehensive air pollution control program in the nation. We have the primary responsibility for controlling air pollution from more than 17,900 industrial and commercial facilities. District engineers conduct source test and technical reviews of state-of- the-art air pollution control projects for virtually every type of industry. Our jurisdiction includes many of the nation's major petroleum refineries, power plants, chemical industries, metallurgical industries, resource recovery plants, and aerospace industries. The District's headquarters is located east of downtown Los Angeles, and within an hour's drive of Southern California's world-famous beaches, mountains, Hollywood, Disneyland, and the Rose Bowl. For more information, contact the Career Placement Office. We will be on campus during the week of October 17, 1988. An Equal Employment Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer Minorities and females are encouraged to apply. THEY'RE BACK BAR-B'Q All You Can Eat Dinner Special Tuesday: Fajita night! Beef fajitas with all the fixin's. Party Packs for 3 to 30 people,, quick, convenient and affordable. Culpepper Plaza 693-4054 S N N SHOT JLast Chance Freshmen and Sophomores September 12-30 Juniors and Seniors Vets, Meds and Grads Octobers—28 October 17—21 1989 Aggieland Yearbook Associates 401C University Above Campus Photo 846-8856 8:30 a.m. — 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday Contracts for recognized student organizations are available in the club mail boxes in the Student Finance Center and in 230 Reed McDonald. Late contracts will be accepted until Friday Sept. 30. Texas poll favors Bush over Dukakis What’s Up Monday FORT WORTH (AP) — Texans favor Republican George Bush for president by a 10-point margin, according a to a poll released Sun day, which also seems to indicate that top-of-the-ticket choices are mo tivating voter preferences. The vice president leads his Dem ocratic rival, Massachusett’s Michael Dukakis, with support from 50.6 percent of 1,443 likely voters sur veyed for the Fort Worth Star-Tele gram and WFAA-TV, Dallas. Dukakis received support from 40.7 percent of the voters surveyed in the poll, which was taken Sept. 17- 20. About 8.7 percent of the voters surveyed were undecided. With a margin of error of 2.6 per cent, Bush’s nearly 10 percent lead in Texas was pronounced “very good news” by his campaign’s Texas spokesman. “The message is getting out loud and clear throughout Texas that George Bush is a conservative Texan and Michael Dukakis is a liberal poli tician from Massachusetts,” spokes man Reggie Bashur said. But Dukakis’ Texas campaign manager, Tom Cosgrove, said he be lieved the momentum would return to the Democratic campaign after the presidential candidates debate in North Carolina Sunday night. The poll also indicates Texas vot ers aren’t letting their presidential choice be influenced by the vice presidential candidates, Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen and Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle. “It’s the top of the ticket that is driving the outcome,” Frank New port, the Houston pollster who con ducted the survey, said. “Bentsen is not helping Dukakis . . . and Quayle is not a significant factor.” GREEN EARTH SOCIETY: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 704 Rudder. EXTERNAL AFFAIRS OF THE STUDENT GOVERNMENT: will have a for everyone interested in joining external affairs at 8:30 p.m. in 402 Rudder. NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN: will meet to organize semester events and elect officers at 8:30 p.m. in 607 Rudder. INTRAMURALS: entries open for tennis singles, golf doubles and weightlifting at 8 a.m. in 159 Read. DEBATE SOCIETY: will have tryouts for the first semester debate "Should The Last Temptation of Christ 1 be banned from A&M?” at 7 p.m. in 136 Blocker. POLITICAL SCIENCE SOCIETY: will meet at 7 p.m. in 607 Rudder. UPSILON PI EPSILON: will have a pledge meeting and certificate distributional 8 p.m. in 128 Zachry. BLACK GRADUATE STUDENT’S ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in302 Rudder. TAMU COLLEGIATE 4-H: will have a pizza party at 7 p.m. at Mama's Pizza. PHI THETA KAPPA ALUMNI: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 604 Rudder. SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION: will meet at 7:15 p.m. in 103 Soil and Crop Sciences. SPEECH COMMUNICATION SOCIETY: will discuss how to use the Placement Center at 7 p.m. in 120 Blocker. Tuesday AGGIES ABROAD CLUB: Frances Munsey will discuss Japanese cultureal? p.m. in 604 Rudder. TAMU HORSEMAN’S ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. at the Freeman MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 302 Rudder. PRE MED/PRE DENT SOCIETY: will meet to tour the TAMU Medical School at 7 p.m. in the lobby of the Medical Sciences Building. TAMU SAILING TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in the Military Sciences Building. TAMU SURF CLUB: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 401 Rudder. For more information call Hank Townsend at 696-9451. MSC VARIETY SHOW: will meet at 7 p.m. in 404 Rudder. TRIATHLON CLUB: Dave Rainey from “Runner and Triathlete News "will speak about training and racing in Texas at 8 p.m. at the Aerofit health club. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION/ALPHA OMEGA: will meet with slu dents interested in lay ministry and vocations at 7 p.m. in the student center li brary. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION/ON CAMPUS CATHOLICS: will discuss birth control, the Pill and the rhythm method at 9 p.m. in the All Faiths Chapel. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: Ernst and Whmneyrl offer information on carreers in Data Processing at 7 p.m. at Clayton Williams Alumni Center. SPANISH CLUB: will discuss plans for the taco party at 8 p.m. at Mama’s Pizza WAS iativi ban ss dr :asing wit In a icrie to ci ives land m tli ee le lily r A nui ion l -e be diff louse a Also )th ( ■an A agaii nanc ienat rd, D jepr :he 1 t. 16 | s iiial iinesi Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 2/6 ReedMcDontH, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions arem on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. Ilf on have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Friends give up search ror WW if pilot’s body TEXARKANA (AP) — Forty-Five years after Lt. Wayland Bennett crashed his plane in a jungle on a South Pacific island, hometown friends tried but have given up their effort to recover his body. An expedition of two women and four men combed the island of Espiritu Santo, about 1,200 miles north east of Australia, where Bennett was a pilot in what later became known as the “Black Sheep” squadron. After almost two weeks of facing poisonous snakes, malaria-carrying mosquitoes and spiders the size of sau cers, the group abandoned the hunt, Robert Bowden, who organized the search, said. Natives of the island, the largest in the archipelago republic of Vanuatu, will continue the project, said Bowden, who is chairman of the Tri-State chapter of the American Red Cross and controller for a Texar kana insurance agency. “This is like an unfinished book,” Bowden, 65, told the Dallas Times Herald. “We won’t give up until Way- land has been buried with his parents in Texarkana.” Bennett, Bowden, D.A. Carson and Robert Sandlin grew up as best friends in Texarkana and then went off to World War II. All returned except for Bennett, who flew a Corsair fighter in the Marine Corps. “He was considered a top gunner,” Bowden said. In 1949, six years after the crash, the militaryoft dally gave up trying to find Bennett’s body and listedii “non-recoverable," Bennett said. But over the years, Bowden said, Bennett’s hood buddies kept the memory alive. “Whenever we got together, we felt it was a sham Wayland’s body was left in the jungle halfway around the world,” Bowden said. Bowden got copies of the flight log and accidents ports, tracking down his squadron commander and studying the geography and culture of Espiritu Sanii which measures 70 miles by 35 miles. Texarkana chiropractor Dan Bookout, a record-set ting aviator, got involved when Bowden went to! June for a wrist ailment. During the examination den mentioned his interest in retrieving Bennett's re mains. Hui Bookout and his wife, Phyllis, were planningasut mer trip to Australia and offered to detour to Vanuffl to look for the body, Bowden said. Bowden established a fund to defray the eslitnitt $25,000 cost of the expedition. During a routine training mission on Oct. 22, 1943, the right wing of Bennett’s plane folded (the wings were designed to fold up so the planes would take up less space), and the Corsair plunged with a violent spin into the jungle of Espiritu Santo. “The jungle swallowed him as if he had crashed into the ocean,” Bowden said. There was no fire or explosion, other pilots said. Al though they had the coordinates of the crash, the mili tary was unable to find the wreckage. The group vised metal detectors and compasses® their search for the wreckage and turned to Ken Mc&- wan, a guide and mining exploration engineer on lit island, for assistance. McGowan employed about30w lives to help with the search, Bowden said. Bookout told Bowden by phone Thursday nighttl/ natives led the search party to eight crash sites. “Three of them had bones and artifacts,” he said none of the sites involved Bennett’s plane, Bow 1 said. TAMU BICYCLING CLUB Tired of struggling to keep up with the pack ? There’s more to cycling than racing! Tuesday, September 27 8:30 pm 704 Rudder Recreational riders, tourists, mountainbikers welcome! For more information call Gordon Powell 696-6599 TECHNICAL PEN SAVINGS PLUS S> SM EDTLER FREE SCHOOL SUPPLIES Get this FREE Value Pack of Staedtler school supplies and reuseable CacheCase worth $12, when you buy a specially-priced Marsmatic technical pen set with 7 pens plus ink. Available now at your college store. 1\ fashi chec have local El volu slate sure char T 250 oper F2 M lene it co day tior fore< H non pecti the c cane Ai ter i and and west with Jiph poss two, Cc K Witl gvee Shai sigh per; simi Sha rooi dou nioi cun sist. ( or 5 for Chr bein pick you you