C.C. reader. ([Middletown, Pa.]) 1973-1982, November 20, 1980, Image 15

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    .C. Reader
ILE...' % .IL L !2Li . LLh A M
The first meeting of the Tarnhelm
staff was held in the Gallery Lounge on
Veteran's Day with six students and two
faculty members attending.
Topics addressed at the meeting
were evaluation procedures for art and
literary work submitted to Tarnhehn,
fund-raising
. ideas should the magazine
need more pages or copies, faculty
submissions, advertising, a theme for
the magazine, and a schedule for reading
meetings during the winter term.
Five of the six students at the
meeting said they wouldlike to write for
Tarnlielm and three said they would be
interested in reading submitted works
and making decisions on the magazine's
content.
They bring to total to 12 persons
interested in writing and five who would
FOREIGN AND DOMESTICS
TEACHERS ORGANIZATION
Education students who will need
a teaching position upon graduation may
want to contact the Foreign & Domestic
Teachers Organization.
This organization accepts teacher
applicants in all fields from kindergarten
through college to fill teaching vacancies
both at home and abroad. The group also
has information on scholarships, grants,
and fellowships.
Although the organization cannot
promise every Education graduate a
definite position, it can provide the
teacher applicants with hundreds of
current vacancy notices both domestic
and worldwide.
For further information write the
Portland Oregon Better Business
Bureau or the National Teacher's Place
ment Agency, Universal Teachers, Box
5231, Portland, Oregon, 97208.
agfr, i;
ba
Little Known Facts
You can keep baby's
stuffed toys from getting
too grimy if you clean them
with dry cornstarch from
time to time. Rub it in, wait
a few minutes, then brush it
off.
fashionable in a pretty
heartprint dress from
Mothercare, retailing spe
cialists for mothers-to-be,
babies and children under
seven. It comes in blue with
delicate side ties and but-
Clubbin' around
like to be evaluators. Three others also
said they would like to submit art and
photos to Tarnhelm.
The SGA approved the 1980-81
Tarnhellip budget by a unanimous vote in
a recent meeting. The budget figure
they approved will pay for 500 copies of
32 pages each on high-quality paper,
with no limit on photos and graphic
works.
With the student interest thus far
shown and the budget the SGA approv
ed, Tarnhelm promises to be an excellent
representation of the literary talent on
Capitol Campus.
The first winter term issue of the
C.C. Reader will have an article explain
ing the purpose and history of Tarnhelm,
a tentative meeting schedule, and sub
mission and evaluation procedures for
interested writers.
Tarnhelm News will be a regular part
of the C.C. Reader during winter term.
PHOTO CLUB NEWS
Photo Club is active. We have four
teen members and constantly are get
ting new members.
The club has taken the EIT pictures
and printed them over the weekend;
engineers can pick them up in the MDET
office.
The club's last meeting is Thursday,
November 20 at 8:15. The meetings for
next term will be posted at the begin
ning of the term.
Happy holidays and we will see you
all next term.
Women still making less than men
Campos Digest .Vervi Sen
Female executives in U.S. companies still
get paid less than their male counterparts
despite career gains in recent years, according
to a study of women officers of the country's
largest industrial companies and leading finan
cial and retailing businesses.
Women are not being given the same
amount of responsibilities as their male
counterparts either, according to the study.
The typical female business executive earns
less than $50,000 a year in cash. She is mar
ried, in her 40s and white. She comes from a
low-income or lower middle-income
background. She has at least one college
degree, however, her parents did not attend
college.
The proportion of female executives who
have reached the level of vice president or
above continues to increase. In 1980, the pro
portion is 28 percent as compared with 25.5
percent in 1979 and 25.2 percent in 1977.
Six of every 10 female officers earn less than
$50,000 a year and three out of every 10 earn
less than $30,000. The study also found that
one of every five female executives earns
$70,000 a year or more and 8.6 percent of
them earn $lOO,OOO or more.
The women typically have had three dif
ferent full-time employers over their careers.
Solution
Thursday, November 20, 1980
"The immortal helmet that li s the mind to the wings of the wind"
graduate degrees offered here at Capitol
Campus, and a future outlook on grad
uate studies. Dr. Gross stated that
Capitol Campus has a "serious student
The Graduate Student Union held body with a clearly focused purpose" and
their inaugural lecture on Wednesday he is interested in feedback from stu
evening, November 12, with Dr. Gross dents on their graduate programs.
as their guest lecturer. Approximately WATCH FOR DETAILS NEXT
25 students and faculty members heard TERM ON GSU MEETINGS AND
Dr. Gross speak on "Graduate Education ACTIVITIES.
in South Central Pennsylvania." He
addressed various areas of this topic
GRADUATE EDUCATION IN SOUTH
CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA
including neighboring colleges, the
About a fourth of those surveyed have worked
fewer than six years for their present
employers, although another 22 percent have
devoted 26 years or more to the same com
pany.
Slightly more than 50 percent joined their
current employer in a clerical capacity, but
younger women were more likely to have join
ed the staff as managers or professionals.
Almost 80 percent of the female officers
who lack college degrees had clerical jobs
when they first joined their companies while
only one-fourth of the college educated did.
Two-thirds of the women were promoted to
their current jobs from within the company.
More than a fourth of the executives hold a
graduate degree. Advanced degree holders
constitute nearly half of those who earn more
than $50,000 a year.
Of the women surveyed, nearly six of 10
said that a master's degree in business ad
ministration is the most helpful in accelerating
the progress of a woman just starting her
career.
Three-fourths of the women officers said
they had a scholastic average of B+ or higher
during their undergraduate years. The survey
found that the women with the higher salaries
outperformed their male counterparts
academically.
4A-
DOUGLAS T. CHARNEY
President
3802 Harness Lane
Camp Hill, PA 17011
761-0518
PHI BETA LAMBDA
THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY
CAPITOL CAMPUS
Page 15
Bob Hope
says:
"Red Cross
can teach you
first aid.
And first aid
can be a
life saver:"
Keep Red Cross
ready.
A n„nr4 Ser Niew,.3lle,
A TM , Arlvc,s,i4J(.iunri
DAVID J. BOYD
Vice President
28 Kensington Drive
Camp Hill, PA 17011
737.4173