OCR Text |
Show Page 12 Recruiting Data at Wabvr Stat September 28 October 10 Odobr 1 1 October 1 1 October 16 October 16 October 16 October 16-17 October 17 October 1 9 October 19 October 19 October 22 October 23 October 23 October 23 October 24 October 24 October 25 October 26 October 30 Odober30 October 31 cm G p L j THE BANK THAT GOES TO SCHOOL WITH YOU Member FDIC Located in Room 21 of the Stewart Library, Career Services has issued this list of company representatives scheduled to be on campus during toll quarter: RECRUITING SCHEDULE Company Pepperdine University School of Law Ampex Corporation Boeing Corporation Bendix General Dynamics Electronic Data Systems Fidelity Union Life Texas Instruments National Semiconductor Williams Research Cleveland Pneumatic American Microsystems Western Gear Corning Glass V ought Corporation Peterson. Sorenson, Brough Dresser Industries Ford Motor Storage Technology Weinstocks Hughes Aircraft Thiokol Corporation American Graduate School of International Mgmt. Major Seeking EET, MET EET. MET MET. ET TBA ST, DP, Math, Business All Majors MET. EET. 1ET EET. MET Logistics, MET MET. IET EET, Physics, Chemistry Business, EET. ME MET MET, EET. Log. Ac co unting MET, EET, Physics MET, EET, IET MET, EET, IET Business EET , IET TBA All Ma jo rs The right And mS 1 X V Ogden Main Office 2404 Washington Boulevard Lobby 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m., Monday thru Thursday 9:00 a.m. 6:00, Friday No Drive-in . Washington Drive-In Office 2722 Washington Boulevard Lobby 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m., Monday thru Thursday 9:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m., Friday DrjVe-in 9:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m., Monday thru Friday Main Point Office Corner 5600 South and Combe Road Lobby and Drive-in 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m., Monday thru Thursday 9-Ln? , m' 6:00 p m'' Friclav ' 1800 Washington Boulevard South Ogden - h.h thru ThnrQrtau Lobby - 9:00 a.m. - VJ"- ..... ...L'.r!Cy 9:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m., r,,ray J Drive-in 9:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m., ,nday thru Friday North Ogden 2596 North 400 East Same hours as South Ogden Roy Office 1995 West 5600 South Same hours as South Ogden 4301 Harrison Boulevard (First Security State Bank of Ogden) Same hours as South Ogden 246-1 2th Street (First Security State Bank of Twelfth Street) Same hours as South Ogden Signpost Brady emphasizes master teachers The 1979-80 school year should be a year with emphasis on quality teaching, President Rodney H. Brady said. He urged college personnel, during opening meetings earlier this week, to do their utmost in the directions of recruiting students, then meeting their needs to the fullest when they arrive. A master teacher endowment fund is being created, he said. The account already has more than $60,000, which will earn $6,000 per year. At the end of the academic year, Dr. Brady said, $2,000 in 1 most important thing in your life now, is probably not your bank. that's as it should be. You aren't here to worry about your bank.-But your bank should beTiere to worry about youv'-i And we are. That's the First Security feeling. Confidence, security, trust. If you're from any one of over 100 Intermountain cities, you may have grown up with that feeling. And you have every right to expect it here. tven it hirst becunty was noT your bank at home, we want to be vour bank here. Come in. 4 as cash will be awarded to each of two "distinguished presidential professors" to be selected by the president. The president will choose the master teachers according to criteria set up by a faculty committee. Another $1,000 will be awarded to each of the two for use in any way they wish to improve their teaching skills. Still another fund will be established to bring to the campus visiting master teachers to serve as consultants in other ways. These visitors would stay for perhaps a week, he said. WSC team creates space shuttle projects Several Weber State College students and a physics professor are working on two separate projects which will be sent into space with the, famed Space Shuttle. Dr. David A. Tripp, professor of physics at WSC and an astrophysicist, is advising the team composed of students Jerome Horowitz Jr., Doris Young, Cindy Tracy and Brian Waterfall. Horowitz and Tracy are working on what they call a "High Energy Physics" experiment tb be completed in space. According to Dr. Tripp, the students will send a stack of lexan-plastic plates into space on the shuttle. They will be exposed fo high energy particles. "As the charged particle goes through the plastic," says Dr. Tripp, "it creates a molecular disorder. The degree of disorder is dependant upon the energy of the particle." Once the plates have been exposed and brought back to earth, the students will develop them in sodium hydroxide. This will help the young scientists to determine the energy of the particles, Dr. Tripp said. "We also hope," says Dr. Tripp, "to be able to discover the source of those energy particles." Horowitz has developed a way to aim the plates so as to discover where the particles are coming from. Dr. Tripp says, "Not a lot of information on these particles has been gathered because they are not numerous and the atmosphere breaks them up before they get to earth. There are energy processes going on "in space that we don't totally understand.Sfjc and Waterfall will be working on 2 biochemistry Class changes start Monday with no added fees. A week later, there will be a $1 charge for adding a class. September 28, 1979 1 i,1 VtSC PRKSIDKNT Brady seeks master quality education. Roilm y H. rs for teaclu project to be sent up with the Shuttle. According to Dr. Tripp, it involves "electrophoresis" or the separation of molecules such as proteins. Dr. Tripp says, "There has always been a problem in the separation of the molecules because of gravity. The heavy molecules tend to settle. As a result, we haven't had extremely efficient separations." The students will be designing and building an instrument which can be flown into space, and in which the separations can be made without the influence of gravity. "The idea," says Dr. Tripp "is that in space we're working in a zero-gravity environment, or a state of free-fall. In this situation you dorrt have the effects of gravity trying to settle things." If the experiment is successful, biochemists could possibly use the procedure for various drug processes in space. Dr. Tripp says the experimentation is especially important to those companies which produce semi-conductor materials for use in televisions and calculators. The semi-conductor is grown in a crystal form. "But," says Dr. Tripp, "as you grow the crystals, they have discontinuities because of the gravity. As a result, the companies have to reject a high percentage of them." "If they can be grown in space and brought back, it is estimated that the rejection rate could drop from say 60 percent to 20 percent," he says. - -i ..1- n: 1 " - :n ine siiuiue uigiii which wm carry the Weber State experiments is scheduled to lift off between 18 to 24 months from the initial orbital test flight, which is scheduled some time nexi year. |