The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 27, 1967, Page Page Four, Image 4
New Gi
DELTA ZETA
Delta Zeta pledge class officers
are Sybil Cheek, president; Phyllis
Boswell, vice-president; C a r o l
Simons, secretary; Debbie Gard
ner, treasurer; Pam Morgan and
Mary Dowling, song leaders.
KAPPA DELTA
Kappa Delta initiated six new
members Oct. 10. They are Bev
erly Beard, Columbia; Courtney
Drury, Arlington, Va.; Polly
Farmer, Berea, Ohio; Jan Hub
bard, Columbia; Susan Mattox,
Salisbury, N. C.; Sandy Turner,
Columbia.
Officers for the fall semester
are Ellen Boatwright, president;
Sarah Bryant, vice-president; Di
ane Dorman, secretary; Becky
Warren, treasurer; Lutu Johnston,
assistant treasurer; Lady Nichol
son, pan-hellenic delegate; Jean
Bennett, rush chairman; Angela
Clark, editor.
Kappa Delta celebrated the
seventieth anniversary of the na
tional sorority with a banquet at
the Redwood Cafeteria Oct. 23.
Dr. Lawrence Giles of the Depart
ment of Education at USC was
the speaker.
/w t yout
tl whrei te6 M
Peter Beno
Substrate
at IBM, se
whe
can
ahes
Thei
on c
Oct.
or N
Sign up for an
ment office-i
graduate schc
Join IBM a
in the world's
changing maj<
handling and1
one of many r
move ahead
5,000 more rr
did less than fi
You'll worki
of a small teai
matter how la
means you gI
achievement a
reeks ii
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA
Fall pledge class officers of
Kappa Kappa Gamma are Julia
Allen, president; Mary Francis
Brown, vice-president; D o n n a
Smith, secretary; Elsa Jacobs,
treasurer; Barbara Boyan, activi
ties chairman.
Pledges activated Oct. 14 were
Gail Griffith and Sharon Schoolar,
Springfield, Va.
MAXCY BROTHERHOOD
New fall semester officers of
Maxcy Brotherhood are Bill Mad
den, publicity c h a i r m a n, and
R a n d y Hawkins, corresponding
secretary.
PHI EPSILON PI
Phi Epsilon Pi pledged two new
members in open rush Oct. 12.
They are Ron Gravis, Alexandria,
Va., and Fred Magner, North
Massapequa, N. Y.
New actives are Eugene Bar
shay, Orlando, Fla.; Lou Dubo
wiez, North Attleboro, Mass.;
Mike Galloway, Anderson; Harry
Goldberg, Silver Spring, Md.;
Mark Katz, Massapequa, N. Y.;
Steve Mallot, Massapequa Park,
N. Y.; J. P. Patterson, Columbia;
;7jrt!n R / Runne,
"/ymou#, Za/ers
ertgoes on.,y
?quista, a Manager of
Process Engineering
ys:
it a compa
re bright :
leaptfrog
i see IBM
ampus
30th, 31st
ov. 1st:'
interview at your place- Pete
~ven If you're headed for IB
oI or military service. po
nd you'll launch a career pere
fastest growing, fastest Y
>r indlustry-information You
control. This growth is of-t
easons young people can noic
Lt IBM. (We have over Il
anagers today than we edu<
our years ago.) payi
individually or as part plic
n (two to six people) no ter'
irge your project. That V
at quick recognition of hav
nd alao a stronene ona f ovem
iitiated
Stuart Shubin, Philadelphia, Pa.
Miss L o r r a i n e Lourie was
crowned Alpha Theta Chapter
Sweetheart at the annual home
coming party held Oct. 20 at the
Oak Grove Civic Center. Music
was supplied by The Columbians.
Miss Bonnie Solomon and Miss
Claudia Alperin were chosen for
the Sweetheart Court. After the
selections, Steve Heller was pre
sented the "Gary Poliakoff Indian
of the Year Award."
Phi Epsilon Pi will hold a drop
in for alumni and guests at 4 p.m.
Saturday before the USC-Mary
land game.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Pledge class officers of Sigma
Phi Epsilon are Pete Pantsari,
president; Bob Hardison, vice
president; Dick Bardes, comp
troller; Rick McIntyre, recording
secretary; and Andy Dawid, cor
responding secretary.
ENGINEERING (
for Senil
CAf
Pratt &
Whitney
Aircraft
An Equal Oppe
SPECIALISTS IN POW
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUOE
;uys i
Benequista graduated with a B. S.
's Systems Development Division as a
oted to Manager of Substrate Process
onal contribution.
ou can stay technologically hc
'11 have an opportunity to do stat
be-art work in many different tec:
gies or computer applications.
EM makes it easy to continue yot
ation. One program, for exampi
tuition and fees for qualified al
ints while you work on your Ma
Sor Ph.D.
There would you like to work? V
e 19 plants, 21 laboratories, ar
25 offA ices. trought he U.S.T
wktat
We would like to applaud the ingenui
added the postscript to the Capstone E
should be properly dressed or wear raincoi
Someone had added, "Why?" and our her
That sounds like the reasoning behind a
rules of Carolina.
LAVALIEREI
Mary Thigpen (Radford College) to 4
Ashley Williams (Columbia College) to (
Nancy Quayat to Bill Smith (PiKA).
PINNED
Nancy Brady (Pi Phi) to Robert Angle
(S. C. State Hospital) to Bob Rivers (Ii
(Anderson) to Robert Peck (Lambda Chi:
to Curtis Haltiwanger (Pi Kappa Phi, CI
Stoner (Fairfax, Va.) to Fred Frick (
Young (Pi Beta Phi) to John Chase (AT,
MARRIED
Susan Willis (ADPi) to Jim Brant (L
(ZTA) to Jim Ley (Lambda Chi).
IPPORTUNITIES
Drs and Graduates in MECHANICAL
ELECTRICAL,
CIVIL, MARIN
INDUSTRIAL I
PHYSICS, CHI
METALLURGY
MATHEMATIC
COMPUTER S
ENGINEERINC
ENGINEERINC
1PUS INTERV
MONDAY,
Appointment!
in advance th
College Placer
OPU
DIISON UN O .P ..N CRAFT CORP.
A
ritunlly Employer
ER... POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIAI
1RCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND 114
Eninern at aT ajrIB lat
e' bu
iMehnlEngineering inc and4 Adst
Enineriatn C oe see pln.
t . crs. in aretis gu Conmpuwrter
3- F. Cammack, IBM corporation. 1447 Peachti
s- N.E., Room 810. Atlanta, Georgia 30309.
An Eqoual Opportunityu E mploue
CAREI
ty of the Carolina coed who
ign which read: "All girls
its when going to basement."
o answered, "It might rain."
any of the current dressing
sleburn Turner (KA); Mary Our re]
hip Hough (Kappa Sigma);
N'
(Phi Delt); Susan Caldwell
appa Sigma); Karen Neese to interview
Anne Simms (Delta Zeta) Loop Coursi
llege of Charleston); Cathy
sigma Phi Epsilon); Jamie THE LOO
lege gradual
careers with
ambda Chi) and Lee Wilson in early Ju
(1) orientati<
Pa.; (2) spe
field for wh
(3) on-the-jc
more import
OPPORTI
terested in st
AERONAUTICAL, mining, acco
CHEMICAL,
E, DEGREES
ENGINEERING, lurgical, ele
EMISTRY, mining, and
CERAMICS, chemistry, :
S, STATISTICS, ministration,
CIENCE,
SCIENCE,
MECHANICS If you expec
and would I
with a Bel
placement o
|E W S appointment
our booklet
the Loop Cc
NOV. 6 obtained by
nel, Bethlehe
should be made
rough your
nent Office
BETH
An
in 1i
tY SYSTEMS.
DUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.
Tuesd
engi
F
Talk with Nev
sultant aboul
largest shipbu
is as bii
Our half-a-biliion
ing salary, caret
I It also means si
with nuclear shi1
* carrier and subn
* recently comuplet
a major builder
equipment. We'i
know-how to ti
power generatiol
desicns for the
Interested in an
door to Virginia
the world's larf
study in high en
College and Unix
you can Cet cre(
in Microwave TlI
lgineering and 0t
shiips, tuition gr
erted in nient these op
he was Ask, too, about
here in the heart
with superb beal
WfrIMMEDIATE
Appli- Mechanical Engi
:h and Electrical Engini
Field Marine Engineer
Industrial Engin<
minis- Systems Analyst
to Mr. C.
ee Street
He'll h>c at the
cuss quahificatio
ERS IN STEEL
presentative will be on campus
DVEMBER 7, 1967
candidates for Bethlehem's 1968
training program.
P COURSE trains selected col
es with management potential for
Bethlehem Steel. The Course begins
ly and consists of three phases:
in at our headquarters in Bethlehem,
cialized training in the activity or
ich the Looper was selected; and
b training which prepares him for
ant responsibilities.
JNITIES are available for men in
eel plant operations, sales, research,
unting, finance, and other activities.
required are mechanical, metal
trical, chemical, industrial, civil,
other engineering specialties; also
hysics, mathematics, business ad
and liberal arts.
to be graduated before July, 1968,
ike to discuss your career interests
blehem representative, see your
fficer to arrange for an interview
-and be sure to pick up a copy of
"Careers with Bethlehem Steel and
>urse." Further information can be
writing to our Manager of Person
m, Pa. 18016.
LEHEM STEEL
Equal Opportunity Employer
te Plans for Progress Program
lay, October 31,
explore an
neering career
on earth's
ist frontier.
rport News On-Campus Career Con
engineering openings at world's
ilding company-where your future
as today's brand new ocean.
dollar backlog of orders means high start
r security, with your way up wide open.
ope3 for all your abilities. We're involved
propulsion and refueling, nuclear aircraft
iarine building, marine automation. We've
3d a vast oceanographic ore survey. We're
of giant water power and heavy industrial
e starting to apply our nautical nuclear
fast exp)anding field of nuclear electric
1. We're completing competitive systems
Navy's $1 billion plus LHA fleet concept.
advanced degree or research? We're next
Associated Research Center with one of
est synchrocyclotrons, offering advanced
orj'y physics. We're close to Old Dominion
'ersity of Virginia Extension Division, where
its for a master's desrcc, or take courses
cory, Solid State Electronics, Nuclear En
her advanced subjects. Ask about scholar
ants, study and research leaves to imple
the pleasant living and lower living costs,
of Virginia's historic seasidle vacation land,
:hes, golf, fishing, boating, hunting.
ENGINEERING CAREER OPENINGS
neers Naval Architects
ers Nucle~ar Engineers
Civil Engineers
hers Metallurgical Engineers
See our representative
Marion Vaughan
Tuesday, October 31
'lacement Office to answer questions, dis
ns, take applications for fast action.
Ort 1%o n
%AND DRY ('OCK (i ANY. NLWPORT NEWS, yifginm