The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 13, 1988, Image 6

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    I
£
3,
A World of Opportunity
in the Land of the Sun.
It's easy for companies to see what's going on around
them. Competitive activities. Market trends.
New product developments.
What sets
Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector
apart is our focus on the internal force. People
as the source of innovation.
With an unwavering
belief in employee participation and recognition,
we've built a history of technical achievement,
in which a simple principle has always been
with us:
A strong partnership with our people
makes continued growth — and successful
competition — possible.
Find your world of opportunity. Your world of options. And
a sunny lifestyle rich in recreation and the scenic beauty of
the Southwest. Make technical history with Motorola when
you join our Semiconductor Products Sector (SPS) in Tfexas
or Arizona.
As a leader in the research, development and manufacture
of microelectronics, we are constantly seeking skilled gradu
ates eager to apply their abilities to challenging professional
assignments. These include working with the latest circuit.
MOS. logic and memory technologies at SPS’s highly
sophisticated facilities in Phoenix. Arizona or Austin, Tfexas.
Whether you choose direct job placement or the diverse
exposure of our Rotational Program, you'll find that SPS
maintains a high degree of employee participation in an
atmosphere of shared responsibility. Engineering and other
professional opportunities are currently available for the
following individuals: Electrical
Engineers • Mechanical
Engineers • Physicists •
Computer Scientists •
Software Development
Engineers • Chemical
Engineers • Chemists •
Materials Scientists •
Finance, Marketing and
Materiels Specialists
We'll be on campus
October 21
For more information, contact
our Manager. College
Recruiting, at the appropriate
address below, or call COLLECT
or TOLL FREE.
Arizona Opportunities
P.O. Box 20903
Phoenix. AZ 85036-0903
COLLECT (602) 994-6394
Texas Opportunities
1112 W. Ben White Blvd.
Suite 200
Austin. TX 78704
TOLL FREE (800) 531-5183
COLLECT (512) 928-6179
C@)
HfOTOFtOLA
Semiconductor Products Sector
An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
Action Employer
Page 6
The Battalion Thursday, 0ctober13jjj
Police Beat
The following incidents were re
ported to the University Police De
partment from Sept. 30 through Mon
day:
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• Eight bicycles, one bicycle
wheel and four backpacks were re
ported stolen from various locations
around campus. One previously sto
len bicycle was found,
• A calculator was reported stolen
from the Agronomy Field Labo
ratory.
• A student reported that she dis
covered a diamond pendant was miss
ing from her necklace after a fight
broke out at a party in the MSC.
• A student reported that someone
stole his wallet from a restroom in
DeWare Field House.
• A portable radio/television was
reported stolen from the Veterinary
Medicine Complex.
• A woman reported that someone
forced the lock off her locker in the
Food Services Commissary and stoic
$290 from her purse.
• Someone stole a telephone from
the MSC.
• A woman reported that someone
stole $20 from her purse in the Mili
tary Sciences Building.
FELONY THEFT:
• A student reported that someone
stole 500 coloring markers from his
desk in the Langford Architecture
Building.
BURGLARY:
• A student reported that someone
broke into his truck and stole his
hang-tag parking permit.
• A student reported that someone
entered her unlocked room in Dorm 3
and stole an All-Sports pass, a foot
ball game pass and four Randy Travis
concert tickets.
• A student reported that someone
stole $50 from a manila folder in her
dorm room.
• A student reported that someone
broke into her ear and stole a radar
detector and 15 cassette tapes.
• An officer arrested two juve
niles after seeing them break a car
window on campus.
• Four video cassette recorders
were stolen from Harrington Tower.
• Four Mosher Hall residents each
reported that someone stole $20 from
their wallets, which were in their
rooms. During the same period, an
other Mosher resident reported that
175 checks were stolen from her
room.
Academic Building.
• A student reported tkl sons,
slushed a tire on his car.
• Several days late, six sfci
from the Mamed Student Ap©!*
reported finding slashed tires at!
cars.
• A student reported that so^
damaged the ignition assemblyt(i
moped.
• While on patrol Oct. 6.as
cer noticed that somoneyi®}
removed parts of the anti-aj©
shanty. Two days later, someosi
knocked the shanty down,
ASSAULT:
• A student reported tkk;
attacked by a classmate inZacte!
gineeridg Center.
• Two students reported thra
were hit by water balloons«5
were walking by PuryearMlj
said when they looked up the; a
grinning student leaning offlef;
window. The incident wasrefe
Student Affairs.
• A student reported to isn
verbally assaulted by another
while attending a College Sj
High School football games(i
Field. Officers working allkg
could not find the other stinks:
PUBLIC INTOXICATION':
• While leaving Kyle Mi
the I exas A&M-TexasTechf®
game, an officer saw an kth
dent who appeared to be iioia
insult other spectators as theyiq
stands, 'file incident was reft™
Student Affairs.
CRIMINAL TRESPASS:
• Officers caught several sta
on the roof of the Academic
mg The students were escateds
and released. The incite
terred to Student .Affairs.
HARASSMENT:
• After tracing the origins!
ral harassing phone calls,ite:
found that the calls originate::
the phone of two students Hsi
dents admitted to making Ik:
w hen they were contacted byk
tective. The incident was refei
Student Affairs.
• Four students reported rear
annoying phone calls. Ones
said she had been receiving fe;
for three weeks.
• A student reported to si
been receiving annoying note!
residence hall door since iisu
mer
FRAUD:
SELF CARE FOR CHILDREN
Fm In Charge
Part of St. Joseph Hospital & Health Center "Learning To Live" Series
We invite you to bring
your children who are
"In Charge" to this special event.
Four dates to choose from!
October 7, 11, 18, 21
St. Joseph Hospital & Health Center
Education Room, Second Floor
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
$5 per child
Enrollment limited to 20 per class
I’M IN CHARGE
REGISTRATION FORM
What to expect
Telephone Safety
Door Safety
Stranger Danger
Fingerprint/Photo ID chart
Halloween Safety Tips
What you receive
Home Safety Materials
Poison control (Mr. Yixfc)
Operation Ident-a-Kid and Photo
Hospital Button and Magnet
Refreshments
"I’m In Charge"Certificate
5^5
Self Care For Children - "I’m In Charge"
Child's Name (age) Child's Name (age)
Parent's Name
Phone #
Address
City State Zip
Check OneQ October 7 □ October 11
I I October 18 □ October 21
MAIL FORM AND CHECK TO:
Community Relations Dept.
St. Joseph Hospital & Health Center
2801 Franciscan Drive
Bryan, Texas 77802-2544
OR CALL: (409) 776-2459
Deadline two days prior to class date
St. Joseph Hospital & Health Center
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF:
• Someone attempted to steal the
radio from a rental car at Fasterw ood
Airport.
• A week later, someone broke
into a ticket drawer at the airport,
damaging the drawer's locking de
vice. Nothing was stolen.
• Someone broke the glass panel
to one of the fire extinguishers in the
• After receiving a repor.
non-student was using the A.P
tel Health Center, an office:
the enme to a College Slate
dent.
DISORDERLY CONDUCT
• A student reported to
she was in the Sterling C. Evss
brary, she saw a malepeekk
the table to look up her skin.
In Advance
Historian will discuss art collecting
By Chuck Lovejoy
Staff Writer
The history of art collecting by En
glish aristocrats will be the subject of
a lecture given by historian Dr. James
Rosenheim at 7 p.m. today in 201
MSC.
The lecture accompanies the Uni
versity Arts Exhibits’ “Aspects of
British Painting 1550-1800,” now on
display in Rudder Exhibit Hall. A re
ception will follow the lecture.
Referring specifically to paintings
included in the showing, Rosenheim
will examine how the practice of col
lecting art in England changed from
the late 1500s to the late 1700s with
respect to the types of paintings col
lected, the origins of the works and
their collective subject matter, as well
as the shift from private hoarffi
more public ownership of the ait
Rosenheim said he will mitt
lecture a lively. undcrstandal) l t
count of the eccentric lengthss
collectors took to obtain sis
paintings shown in the exhibit.
Rosenheim learned about fe
art collectors through his study®
interest in the British aristocrai)
“Every aspect of the English
tocracy fascinates me,” Rose
said. “Since the upperclassauili
owners were the primary cons*
of art works, it only seemsfittii!'
they are the ones who should^!
ied.”
His lecture reflects this idea.
The painting collection whit
Rosenheim’s lecture accomp
will be available for viewing
through Oct. 31 from 8 a.m. Hf
Lecture addresses knowledge explosi
Dr. Eberhard Lacmmcrt, president
of the Free University of Berlin, will
discuss “How to Cope with the Ever-
Growing Body of Human Knowl
edge” today at 7:30 p.m. in 601
Rudder Tower.
The lecture is sponsored by the De
partment of Modern and Classical
Languages.
The Goethe Institute of Houston
and the German Cultural Center orga
nized Laemmert’s trip to the United
States and to Texas A&M.
The Free University of Berlin was
founded after World War II because
many students and profess®
jected to pressure from the c®
nists.
Laemmert has been active
forming universities inGei®®
has written many books.
The Germans use the pbi#
plosion of knowledge" toesF
fact that everyone is faced*:'
much information to kno*
about anything, said D 1
Koepke, A&M Germanprof^ 1
“Our concern is tunnel vis 1
how to counteract that,"hes>
still want to give students alii® 1
ucation.”
Stock prices decreas
to lowest in 2 montl
NEW YORK (AP) — Stock prices
took their sharpest drop in nearly two
months Wednesday as traders uneasily
awaited the latest monthly report on the
nation’s international trade position.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industri
als fell 30.23 points to 2,126.24, for its
largest loss since it dropped 33.25 points
on Aug. 15.
Declining issues outnumbered ad
vances by nearly 3 to 1 in nationwide tra
ding of New York Stock Exchange-listed
stocks, with 397 up, 1,114 down and
450 unchaugeu.
Volume on the floor of *•
came to 154.84 million sh^'
140.90 million in the pre^’
Nationwide, consolidated 1 '
NYSE-listed issues, inchi^'
those stocks on regional e' 1 ;'
in the over-the-counter n^"
184.05 million shares.
The day began amid wi^:'
that the nation’s tradedefc : .
due to be reported Thursday'
merce Department, would^
previously expected.