The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 28, 1966, Page Page Two, Image 2
USC Instc
Women's
The Alpha Lambda Chapter of
Kappa Epsilon, professional fra
ternity for women pharmacy stu
dents, was installed on the USC
campus by Miss Lou Henderson,
national president of Kappa Epsi
lon last Friday.
Charles A. Witten, vice-president
of student affairs, spoke at the
Kappa Epsilon Banquet Saturday
night. Other guests at the dinner
meeting included Dean Robert W.
Morrison of the School of Phar
macy, Mrs. Morrison, members of
the pharmacy faculty and presi
dents of other professional organi
zations in the school.
Twenty-three women b e c a m e
charter members. Members are
elected from among women who
h a v e completed a year of pre
Eastman B
Visit Mark<
The importance of a two - way
conversation between the customer
and industry will be the subject of
an a d d r e s s by two marketing
executives from the E a s t m a n
Kodak Company before a group of
faculty, students, and guests it
L SC November 3.
In a slide presentation entitled,
"Marketing from Z to A," James
W. Welch, Kodak director of re
tail trade relations for consumer
markets, and Langdon Common,
CARVING A LEGEN
from the Blue Ridg
Based i
Incidei
Civil
PANA\
COLUME
Sttdents with '"0""m'*
I.D. Cards $1.00
44N
Ascot Striped4
Gant frames the edge
trasting color; etche
grounds. Result: a
sian in stripings. Th
ford comes in cot<
pumpkin on blue gr<
ground or green on
Hugger body.
2 HOURS PREE PARI
N AT ALL RIGH1f
ills Kapp
Pharma<
pharmacy study and -a semester in
the School of Pharmacy and who
have a grade point ratio of at least
2.000.
Objectives of the organization
are to encourage seholar ship,
friendship a n d professionalism.
The USC chapter has co-sponsored
a Christmas party for orphans,
aided the Crippled Children's So
ciety, arranged a display in the
S c h o o I of Pharmacy for Poison
Prevention Week and sponsored so
cial events for students and wives
of professors.
Officers are Carolyn Fickling,
president; Mary Jo F lo y d, vice
president; Barbara Wilkes, secre
tary; and Ann Merchant, treasurer.
Dr. Evelyn Draper is faculty ad
v:ser.
usinessmen
,ting Clubs
marketing director for the com
pany's Southeastern r e g i o n in
Chamblee, Ga., will explain a mar
k(ting concept of working back
ward from Z - the customer's
needs - to A - the product he
dcsi res.
The USC Student Chapter of the
American Marketing Association
will sponsor this presentation. This
will be the first time that it has
been presented in a southeastern
university.
D OF GREATNESS...
e to the Rio Grande!
Dn a True
it of the
War!
RICHAR
IREZ
mLLY
11SIONO
IACOLOR
Til CAAOLIMAS N
AL 4-S800
SHIRTMAKERS
IxfOr
s of tripe witha[con
issurord cto x
>rframed stripes of
>und; russet on green
gold ground. Tapered
*1966 Gant Shlrtmakers
[ING WITH PURCHASE
PRKInuNG LOT
i Epsilon.
.y Group
Other student members are Both
A b e 1, Virginia Beckman, Elaine
Entrekin, Nathalia Gurley, Shirley
Itarmon, Jo Ellen Leonard, Dianne
leuch and Charlene Searson. The
f raternity also has 11 a I u m n a e
members.
Alumnae members are Linda
Moore Barfield, Mary L. Brown,
Mary Ann Bundy, Marian Richter
Crowell, Marie Dierecky and Gwen
Taylor King.
Also Myrtle E. Mackey, Pat
Butters McCarthy, Linda Reese,
Judy Strange and Marie Wessin
ger.
Speak-Out Dra,
A small but enthusiastic group
of Carolina otudents turned out
for the second Student Speaking
Out session Friday to express their
sentiienLts about campus affairs of
interest.
S t u d e n t Body President Bill
Youngblood n o t e d that some 60
persons w e r c present, including
about 25 faculty members.
iIe said that the increasing num
ber of faculty members present for
the sessions was encouraging but
c> pressed the hope that more stu
(tents would take advantage of the
treated ii
Then Treat tier like
a lady with
Between the law
and the lawless
SEVEN again...
SMAGNIFICENT
again!
JUlIAN MATEOS_-WARREN0O
EUSA MONTES JORDAN CHRI
HELD OVER: "WHA
Through Wednesdi
Late Show !45*E4W"N4."L
Gamecock photo %y Wolfe
A mbassador Deming
ws Small Group
opportunity for self expression.
"We are getting good ideas from
the students who come," he ex
plained, "but Btudents themselves
aren't benefiting as they could if
more turned out."
Youngblood said that a primary
reason for Friday's sparse crowd
was that the time and place of the
meeting was changed because the
visiting Merit Scholars were using
the Assembly Room.
Beginning with the next meeting,
Friday, November 4, Speaking Out
sessions will be held at 1 p.m. every
ot.her Friday in -the Assembly Room
of Russell House.
Want
to be
ke a man?
Box Bounfi ful
- E -
3
gnner.
ftIze=
AmbassA
Student
By CHARLENE SEARSON
Staff Writer al
Ambassador Olcott H. Deming, d
with 27 years of experience in the
Foreign Service for the U. S. State t
Department, held -interviews Fri
Jay for students, interested in
Foreign Service careers. S4
He was the first American am
bassador to New Guanda in Africa. 0
Ambassador Deming has lived in
Bangkok, Thailand, Tokyo, Japan
and Okinawa.
Now one of the nine diplomats
in residence in the United States,
he was once the U. S. Ambassador
to the United Nations in New York
City. He is now at the University n
of North Carolina serving the tri- t
angle of Duke, North Carolina
State, -and the University of North n
Carolina. c
Ambassador Deming explained
that ambassadors in residence at a -I
university express their ideas and I
situations, return to an academic 1
community, and stimulate interest i
in students to become part of the f
Foreign Service.
L
t
LO!
One pair of Corbin Slacl
out of Fraternity Row
You'd better walk a lor
I'll go a long way to ge
they came from ANDY I
This is Russ Kennedy of B.
Chapman College's floating cam
The note he paused to make
Valley of the Kings near Luxor,
Cultures professor.
Russ transferred the 12 un
the University of California at
sciences.
As you read this, 450 othei
Chapman aboard the s.s. RYN[
Agents.
In February still another
this time bound for the Panam;
Spain, Portugal, The Netherlant
For a catalog describing ht
in the information below andm
r- ----- -- ------
Di)rector of A dmissions
Chapmsan College
IOrange, CalIfornia 92666
INam.
I (L.ast)
Address.
(indicate Home or C
I City- - State
ITelephone
LThe Ryndam is of West German ri
Fdorl R
i For k
Once every year, -a written ex- I
uination is given. This year the
.Ae 'is December 3rd. Application
>r the exam must have been
irned in by October 22nd. Anyone
tween the ages of 21 and 30 and
a American citizen for at least
ven years is eligible.
Beginning .salary for the first
F the eight salary classes is from
5,200 and $7,800. The top category
k4editrina Provides
?ed Cross Helpers
Students in the bachelor's degree
ursing program at USC - 97 of
biem - will participate as volun
Lers during the Red Cross Blood
iobile program November 1-2 on
Impus.
The volunteers, all members of
leditrina Nursing Society in the
JSC School of Nursing, partici
ate in all phases of the program
rom taking the donor's history t
iroviding nursing assistance in the
lonor room.
<s - last seen walking
over someone's arm.
ig way, boy, because
t them back; after all,
MAL'S.
tlboa Island, Califorr' .n an in-po:
pus.
as fellow students went ahead to insi
he used to complete an assignmen
its earned during the study-travel se
Irvine where he continues studies t<
students have begun the fall seine
>AM, for which Holland-America L.
150 will embark from L.os Angeles
Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentir
Is, Denmark, Gireat Britain and New
w you can include a semester at sea
mil.
" Chapman
College
Orange, Cali fornia 92666
-(Firs) Present Status
College/Unive
*ege/ University) -Freshman
Sophomore
Z- p - Junior
Age .. Senior
Graduate
~gistry.
ecruit
1CR S
oervice
ias a salary of $25,400 a year.
A diplomat may be assigned to
my of 111 posts in the world. His
.7mily is allowed to go with him,
ind may remain until d a n g e r
.hreatens their well-being.
The work of a diplomat includes
u b I i c administration, consular
work, protecting American visitors
And intelligence work.
T h e r e are drawbacks to the
service; unwanted publicity is in
volved, diplomats are transferred
as soon as they become really fond
of a country, and the educational
facilities of the country are not al
ways the best.
Adequate education is supplied;
tuition for a diplomat's children's
:nrollment will be paid by the State
Department for their attendance at
the nearest adequate school.
DOM TORIELLO
(B.S.Met.E.) of the
Bethlehem Steel Loop
Course knows where the
action is. le's on the move
at the nation's largest
steel plant-our
Sparrows Point Plant
near Baltimore, Md.
Join the action.
First step: pick Ul)
a copy of "Careers
with Bethlehem Steel
and the Loop Course"
ait your placement
office. Ihen sign up1)
for a campus interview.
Our 1967 Loop Class
has openings for technical
andl non-technical graduates
and post-grads) for
careers in steel operations,
research, sales, inining,
accounting, and other
activities.
A nf/)~ I lol (}i>E Irlun, E
EmploYer li the /,(an. for
P'owress P'rogram11
BETHLEHEM
STEEL
rt field trip as a student aboard
pect Hatshepsut's Tomb in the
tfor his Comparative World
mester at sea to his record at
>ward a teaching career in life
ster voyage of discovery with
me acts as General Passenger
for the spring 1967 semester,
a, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco,
York.
in your educational plans, fill
1
IF
o IB4
SIF