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Submarine Sandwiches and Pizza ,or (0 rb atpiih ius ..A4d o4oCung,e Beer on Tap POSSESSION & CONSUMPTION PERMIT NO. 234 SET UPS 2St 1632 SUMTER STREET PHONE RESTAURANT 254-9674 Downtown LOONGE 254.9552 The film that shocked the readers of PLAYBOY KEI DULLEA ___SENTA BERGER ? @ Persons under 18 will positively not be admitted. 1.3-5-7.9 p.m. I ^ T 1 4 Major in Beauty with Natural Wonder By Revlon Meet Donna Noff, Revlon Beauty Consultant at the CAMPUS SHOIP, Nov. 4th and 5th. Refresher course in clean skin. Study the fine art of blushing. lake complexion curriculum. Free back-to-the-books GIFT $1.50 pale-frosted lipstick with every $3.00 purchase THE CAMPUS SHOP (In RUSSELL HO:JSE) Economic predicted of less sn South Carolina should start now to protect its citizens from the economic effects of a predicted nation-wide curtailment of cigarette smoking, says a Carolina marketing professor. Dr. Richard E. Stanley, in an article published in the November issue of USC's Business and Economic Review, predicted a decrease in cigarette consumption due to federal advertising regulations and adds that the decrease will effect South Carolina by both damaging the tobacco farmer and cutting state tax revenue. Stanley pointed out that more than one-fifth of total cash receipts from farm products in the state come from the sale of tobacco and that revenue from tobacco taxes amount to 3.6 per cent of the state's total tax revenue. He also said that a reduction in smoking would reduce the annual $8 million payroll of ap 4? men w Non e. rszo 00,o BuVenur atthinaea ta hanth mar menwh Ny.Reverse osi requir nothaset And wa poeslint But whns Pnova atn fiers inc ainer canth ang te diame essa o 0005inh,t maintained at close t4 of them encased in inches in diameter b T he result: a semi 85,000 square feet-t to 10,000 gallons of d So far "Permasep experimentally to pur and in various indu tential to desalt seaw So Du Pont scienti working toward imp designs that should water from salt at a can aflord. lnnovation-applyi unknown, inventing r to work, using resea the ideas and prodL venture Du Pont peoi For a variety of car to advance through n Recruiter. Or send un r SDu Pont Company, Ro< Please send me the bo O Chemical Engineers LIG Mechanical Enginer Q] Engineers at Du Pot fj Accounting, Data S Name I univers,ty - Degree i Address - City nqaO setback as result ioking proximately 9,000 seasonal tobacco laborers. Pointing to federal restrictions on advertising---cigarette man ufacturers of the Tobacco Institute agreed to discontinue television and radio advertising by Sep tember, 1970 -- Stanley admitted that the advertising will probably be switched to other media, but later added that tobacco com panies are diversifying to protect themselves against a decline in smoking. Since tobacco has such a high yield per acre, it would be difficult for Palmetto State tobacco farm ers to switch -to a crop that would produce as high a return, Stanley said, so consequently it would be difficult for farmers to diversify as are the tobacco companies. He also added that the reduction in state revenues would either lead to a reduction in state programs or to an increase in other existing taxes. \A ZA t-%U.r r1dian~ ltih 44AA ~fiber de mosis. making girls' legs more beauti 0. it's been around a lot longer. scientists and engineers lookI , they combine into an idea that is a purification process that ange. It's potentially the cheap water. on ? Hollow, semipermeable ny-" than human hair. Symmetrical, er of .002 inch and a wall thick ith an accuracy of manufacture > 100%. Twenty-five to 30 million a precisely engineered unit 14 /' 7 feet long. >ermedble surface area of about h~e size of a 2-acre lot--and up asalted water per day. "* permeators have been used ify brackish and polluted water, strial separations. But the po ater, too, is there. sts and engineers are even now roved fibers, units and plant make it possible to get fresh price that any town or nation ng the known to discover the ew materials and putting them rch and engineering to create icts of the future-this is the >le are now engaged in. - eer opportunities, and a chance any fields, talk to your Du Pont the coupon. m 1890, Wilmington, DE 19898 >klets checked below. at Du P'nt rs at Du Po'nt It ~stems, Marketing, Production --Graduation Daite....... State - - - Z Th Ronald Rader (center) holds winning W. C. Fields pumpk contest sponsored by the U Short course 'Filmm for per By LIBBA SLOAN Staff Writer The Filmmaking short course gives the student who wishes to take advantage of it "a chance to make his own personal statement in full color." Some twenty students are now taking the course, which meets at 8 Tuesdays in Room 405, Humanities. Next week, they will begin work on an actual film of their own, with the financial backing of the Student Union. "Filmmaking is the ultimate media," one of the students ex plains. "Without the traditional artistic talents as painting, e great pumpk his prize- Union. H in in the are holdi niversity pumpkin. k 0 aking is Sona1 stal drawing and playing the piano, you can perceive or capture things just by pressing a button." Many of these amateur filmmakers have had no previous experience with cameras, except for the initial lessons of the course. For their films, they will use equipment borrowed from the Union, which also pays a share of film expenses. The cost of a film is surprisingly low. "You can make a short (under five minutes> movie for ten or fifteen dollars worth of film," says course instructor John Tilley, a veteran moviemaker. "Also, color film is only a little more expensive than black and white." As last year, the class creations will be shown to the student body at in -r Carter e is flanked by friends who ng his trophy and a model chance tement' the end of the semester. Tilley also noted the opportunities available in nationwide student film com petitions and movie distribution centers. At this point most of the movies are in the "idea stage." At least two class members plan to attend the November 15 "March on Washington" for some action filming. Tilley describes the course as "6recreational," but hopes to see filmmaking as a serious part of the Universtiy curriculum. He predicts that "eventually film will be the only personal medium," and claims that "Columbia is already a hotbed of moviemaking activity all you have to do is lift up the carpet and look underneath."