Page 2 • The Battalion • Thursday, August 8, 1996 Career Center’s programs help with job searche By Tauma Wiggins The Bati align With mixed emotions, Texas A&M graduating seniors are getting ready to toss their caps and step out into the real world. Jeff Anderson, a senior journalism major, will be moving to Chicago after graduation to pursue an acting career. He said he is prepared to leave, but apprehensive. “It’s exciting and terrifying really,” Anderson said. “I’m nervous about mov ing to a new city, and at the same time it’s exciting that I’m floating with the wind, going wherever it takes me.” Tanisha Hicks, a senior journalism major, said she is relieved and sad to be graduating and moving on. “I was picking up my announce ments in Rudder Theater and they had this film of different shots (of A&M students),” Hicks said. “Then I saw a clip of me and some of my friends from my Fish Camp all acting crazy and I started crying! Now it’s fi nally over, but you feel sad.” Jane Groff, a senior industrial distri bution major, said she is ready to grad uate and start working. “It feels great,” she said. “I can’t wait to start making my own money.” Graduating seniors have used a vari ety of techniques to find jobs after col lege, one being the Texas A&M Career Center, which matches companies’ re quirements with students’ qualifications. Thousands of A&M students like Groff have found the Career Center’s programs rewarding. “I used the placement center exclu sively,” Groff said. “I got offers within a month for a job, and I got accepted for a job in Houston.” Glenn Payne, the Career Center’s associate director for placement, said 23,000 interviews were done last year for job placement, and 60 to70 percent of the interviews were with engineer majors and related companies. Payne said the Career Center pro vides services for co-oping, where stu dents intern for college credit, and a ca reer library, which shows students the jobs available for their majors. Payne said 75 percent of co-oping pro grams are completed by engineering ma jors, with liberal arts and other majors making up the remaining 25 percent. Emily Lenker, a senior biomedical science major, said A&M science ma jors frequently have trouble finding jobs using the Career Center. “Lots of people in my major don’t have any luck with it (the Career Cen ter) at all,” Lenker said. “They (at the Career Center) assume you’ll go to medical or veterinary school right out of college. I’m still looking for a job.” Graduating seniors in non-engineer ing classes have been forced to use oth er job-search options. Hicks said she has not found help from the Career Center, but network ing is the key to finding a job. “I don’t think A&M could be very helpful because I want a job in the en tertainment field,” Hicks said. “I found a job in Atlanta strictly through net working and doing it on my own. As far as liberal arts majors, you have to do it on your own.” Payne said A&M does not attract lib eral arts-related employers, such as magazine or newspaper agencies, be cause of a disjointed voice from liberal arts students on the jobs they desire. “It will take a lot of cooperation from (liberal arts) students,” Payne said. “As long as students can tell me what (jobs) they want, I could make up a resume book and send it to newspaper compa nies, for example, and even arrange a group visit. But I need a group pull.” As graduating seniors face the real ization that college is behind them and a new world awaits, they offer advice to students still in school. “It’s important to have work experi ence,” Groff said. “During an interview you have nothing else to talk about re ally. I’m glad I worked through college.” Zinnia Garcia, a senior industrial distribution major, said endurance is the key to graduating. “Don’t ever give up,” she said. “It takes some people five to six years to graduate. It’s fqn while it lasts, so en joy it and don’t rush through it.” Hicks said for the liberal arts stu dent, maintaining contacts is vital to finding the perfect job. “As far as jobs, networking is impor tant,” Hicks said. “Everyone is a poten tial contact that can help you in some kind of way. This person may not be able to help you, but they may know someone who can. For instance, a DJ in Houston was able to get me in contact with some one who could help me find a job.” Anderson said procrastination is a job searcher’s enemy, and he offered some advice. “Do your resume at the beginning of your senior year, not at the end,” he said. Payne said there are three crucial points to having success when job search time rolls around. “First, do your best at school work,” Payne said. “Second, get involved in stu dent activities so you learn to work with other people. And third, be actively look ing at experiences like co-oping that give you ideas what the work world is like.” New computers make updating resume cask S LI By Melissa Nunnery The Battalion The Texas A&M Career Center is up dating its placement services with four computers donated by Koch Industries. These computers will allow students to access the Career Center home page and update their resumb disks from the Career Center lobby. Eleven computers will have Internet access. Dr. Glen Payne, associate director of placement, said a representative from Koch saw some of the old computers in the Center and offered to donate new equipment. “They (Koch) hit an extreme need,” Payne said. “Now students can come here and do on-campus interviewing and Internet job search.” Payne said students use a Windows resume disk. Until now, the Career Center has not had the equipment to make changes to the disk. The new computers will enable stu dents to access the Internet job line. The job line includes location, start date, description and the names and addresses of companies that are hiring. Scott Minear, a Class of ’90 opera tions analyst for Koch, was the inter viewer who saw the need for new com puters at the Career Center. “Every student goes through the Ca reer Center. They still had computers that were here when I was a student,” Minear said. “We (Koch) hadso%, puters to donate. I thought iu:|| mutually beneficial to Koch and:;, reer Center. It’s a win-win situatij Because of Koch’s donafes, Center will offer one-stop skk with interviews, Internet job seirf brary resources and literature, '' “By networking these machine networked virus software, studeJ use them to access cooperative ! tion, the on-campus interviews:! and Internet job search all intheil Center. I don’t think evenlkEfi, need for new equipment,” Payn-l “Company generosity is what kef ahead in the game.” Michael Grundmeyer, a Classi natural gas analyst for Koch, computers in the Career Center; a big improvement. “(As an MBA student), thing from the MBA lab,” Gmr.J er said. “It was slow and cumbenj Windows is an improvement;yn do it (update resume disk)froniij Before, you could only do itfrc:| tain labs.” Dwight Tomkins, assistant iji of Career Center computing se: said some students have comp! about having to go to other cor| labs to update their resume disks See Computers,P<; Faculty, students react to tenure decisions America offline By Brandon Hausenfluck The Battalion Much more than success as a teacher, re searcher and publisher is required to earn tenure at Texas A&M. Less than 60 percent of faculty members hired as assistant professors are promoted to associate professor with tenure. Dr. Walter Boles, a former assistant pro fessor of civil engineering, is one who was not granted tenure. Boles has earned a reputation in the space exploration industry as a leading researcher for developing ways to live on the moon. He has led students to win second place in the national Lunar Shelter Student Contest for two consec utive years. He has also supervised stu dents doing lunar excavation experi ments on NASA’s aircraft, the KC-135. Both of these events, among others, have brought worldwide recognition to this University. They have also greatly benefited space exploration research. Wes Scott, a doctoral candidate of indus trial engineering, said Boles was always readily available to assist him. “He (Boles) wasn’t one of those profs you would want to get rid of,” Scott said. “We’ve all run into a couple of professors who you wonder how they got tenure.” NASA is one institution Boles’ re search benefited. John Connolly, lunar and Mars mission designer for the NASA Johnson Space Cen ter in Houston, said Boles was dedicated to his research and is on the cutting edge of space exploration. “Walter Boles is trying to explore ar eas of civil engineering that no one has explored,” he said. “I commend him for the work he’s done.” Connolly said Boles was good with stu dents and treated them as equals. “He does more things for students than most professors,” he said. “Stu dents to him are colleagues, not cheap labor, and he is always doing all sorts of student-motivated things.” Boles’ colleagues respected him as a pro fessor and were sorry to see him go. Dr. Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe, department head and professor of civil engineering, said although Boles is a qualified professor, he was not a survivor of the tenure process. “I have the highest respect for Dr. Boles,” he said. “This does not reflect his academic qualities at all.” The tenure process starts when a prospective faculty member is considered for employment. Once hired, the faculty member is subject to a probationary peri od of full-time service, not to exceed seven years. They are also carefully evaluated each year so they will be aware of their progress toward tenure. Dr. David Ellis, an assistant professor of finance, did not receive tenure because he did not send out enough publications. He said one of the disadvantages of publication is the length of time it takes. “It’s a long process to send a paper to be published,” he said. “You have no control over the paper for six to eight weeks. Revi sions take a long time.” Ellis said he became a member of the faculty at A&M before he finished his Ph.D. “I came to A&M six years ago without fin ishing my Ph.D.,” he said. “I was going through the best part of my first year here finishing my dissertation.” Ellis said he looks forward to relocat ing his wife and four kids and does not have any bad feelings towards A&M. “I have no ill feelings at all. I have enjoyed my time at A&M. I have devel oped a solid foundation and have very good colleagues,” he said. “It’s not worth the hard feelings. My wife and I can be happy wherever we go, so I hope we can find the best place for me professionally and for my family.” Candidates must meet criteria in three categories to be eligible for tenure. During the review process, assistant professors should contribute to the de velopment of new courses and create new methods of teaching. Publications of their research conclusions should be made in journals and other works per taining to their field. The candidates for tenure are also expected to serve the University, stu dents, departments, colleagues, and their colleges. Their research should also benefit professional societies, research organi zations, and government agencies. Technical glitch cause online service to eras g/. by Chuck Johnson & 3^- ZL ■ Skotteh By Quatro He tried deodorant, cologne, even wearing air fresheners, but to no avail. Limburger remained the scourge of the cheese counter. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — America Online was knocked out Wednesday by a technical glitch, leaving more than 6 million cus tomers worldwide without their e-mail and favorite Web sites for almost 19 hours. The nation’s largest online service crashed about 4 a.m. EDT, while new host software essential to operating the sys tem ^as being installed. The outage is probably the biggest in online history, said Mark Mooradian of Jupiter Communications, a New York online marketing firm. “Good-bye from America On line. The system is temporarily unavailable,” was the message customers got when they tried to log in. They were asked to try again in 15 minutes ... then one hour ... then an hour and 15 minutes.” And so on, and so on, until 10:45 p.m. “What happened was, when we were doing the installation, we had a technical problem,” America Online spokeswoman Pam McGraw said from the com pany’s office in Chantilly, Va. McGraw said the problem was different from a software glitch that brought down America On line’s e-mail system for an hour on June 19. This time, it involved new host software, essential to the network’s operating systems. “We know it’s a huge inconve nience and we want to compen sate our members for the time they’ve not been able to get on line,” she said. Customers will get a day’s free service to make up for the inconvenience, and e-mail sent to AOL users from outside the system was being stored and would be delivered as soon as possible after the system is run- mng again. ‘‘We’ll start process:: when we get back upjf take a little time, but itri) to them,” McGraw proraiss; Yvette DeBowofJd Communications attrib# outage to growing pa: 1 - America Online, which) million members at the:'’ ning of the year and noh 6.3 million. “They’ve added alot^ s u b s c r i b efSf^Th eyrold ■ , - was a main database prtf that they were taking itc* to fix. Because therear many members and so iMf formation, it’s going to]* awhile to get everything running,” she said. Steve Case, America (f chairman, said the compare doing everything it couldT store service. Across the country, userf countered blank screens ffil empty feeling. ‘‘My whole compar,:!'- stopped. We’ve got peopl«| ning around trying to dof off-line. Everyone’s sudderir alizing how addicted they s| instant access,” said E. Dp Ellington, president and;- executive of NetNoir, a: Francisco-based media comp Still, Ellington was philo; ical about the breakdown. took his company’s World Web site off-line: “Hello,? welcome to technology. It* perfect, so get over it.” DeBow said the outage probably not cause customs drop America Online in dro' “Users of online services still aware that this is a ne* dustry that’s growing. Pe : who use computers are prett! miliar with just how fragile- f can be at times,” she said. Eric Parga Theatre Sa By James F The Battai I t>\ lv Stljdv /Kbroa d Spri njo Student INI <_ASTICU PS ONI F IORENIT1 NIO ARTS.3SO: Art# and Civilization SOCi 205: introduction to Sociology SOCt 330: dais&icai Social Theory ' NTJTxS. BOON 3201 Economic development of Europe L.EAS 332: CSfohaf Economic issuer i IN FORMA TlONA L MEETINGS in 333 BUzet! Halt West ZS$$Hetp£in, fire you a good listener? Vo you tike to help others? fire you a responsible person? (DVotunteen fleeded(£) to begin service in the Fall Semester. *** INTERVIEWING NOW *** Application Deadline is Tuesday, August 20 at 5 PM. Training will take place August 26 - 31. ALL MAJORS are welcome to apply. Applications are available at Room 104 of Henderson Hall. For further information call Ms. Susan Vavra at 845-4427 ext. 133 The Battalion Stacy Stanton, Editor in Chief Stew Milne, Phoio Editor David Taylor, City Editor Jason Brown, Opinion Editor Kristina Buffin, Aggiei.ife Editor Jody Holley, Night News Editor Tom Day, Sports Editor David Winder, Radio Editor Will Hickman, Radio Editor Toon Boonyavanich, Graphics W Staff Members City Desk - Assistant Editors: Pamela Benson & Amy Protas; Reporters: James fowler, Hausenfluck, Ann Marie Hauser, Melissa Nunnery, Heather Rosenfeld, Eridp" Tauma Wicgins AcciFLirE Desk - Assistant Editor: Pamela Benson; Writers: Jeffrey Cranor, Janies Fr.in( April Towery Sports Desk - Sportswriters: Colby Gaines, Ross Hero* & Ray Hernandez Opinion Desk - Coiumnists: David Boldt, Marcus Goodyear, Steven Gycszly, Mi<" Heinroth, Jennifer Howard, Steven Llano, Heather Pace, Jim Pawlikowski, Rerht & Jeremy Valdez Photo Desk - Photographers: Rony Angkriwan, Shane Elkins, Patrick James & GwendolynStrutf Pace Designers - News: Jody Holley & Amy Uptmor; Sports: Kristina Buffin & Tom Day Copy Editors - Brian Gieselman, Shannon Halbrook & Gina Panzica Cartoonists - Chuck Johnson & Quatro Oakley Web Masters - Terry Butler & Chris Stevens Orricr Staff - Heather Harris & Amy Uptmor Radio Desk - Will Hickman & David Winder News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the DivisiondSUP' Publications, a Emit of the Department of Journalism. 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