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Guitar Courses The USC Division of Continuing Education will offer two short courses in folk guitar taught by Roger Arnett and held in the Carolina Coliseum. A Folk Guitar short course will be held Tuesday evenings July 9 through Aug. 27 from 7:30-9:30 p.m. This course will teach song accompaniment and will stress basic. chords, chord progressions and beginning strumming and finger-picking techniques. A second short course, In termediate Folk Guitar will be offered Monday evenings July 8 Aug. 26 from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Classes will focus on finger-picking styles and chord theory with prerequisites for the course in cluding a knowledge of basic chords and chord progressions. Tuition for each course is $22 per person or $37 per married couple. For further information contact the Division of Continuing Education, the University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. 29208 or call 777-2589. 2589. rn V-The Boy Friend *3tlEfs The USC Theatre will present the musical comedy "The Boy Friend" at the Myrtle Beach Convention Center June 25-August 11. The show will run Tuesday through Sunday nights with curtain time at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $3.50 per person and may be reserved by calling the theatre box office at 448-3041. Roses A short course on "Roses" designed' for both the beginning and experienced gardener will be held in Room 303 oJuly Humanities building, Thursday evenings Jully 11-Aug. 1, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. The short course will cover land AajOOM WuL6kiNg Lta become iwMka govawet o'r became itNab0r ob am MAeOM*i COUk wn, 6ke stk4st gmwamt Odie Name Class Major. Type of Involvement Desired.- - - - - -- - - - - - Phone Number preparation and planting, pruning and spring cleaning, fertilization and insect control, recommended roses for this area, and rose exhibiting. Tuition for the course taught by Dr. Wayne Shrader is $13 per person or $20 per married couple. For further information contact the Division of Continuing Education, the University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. 29208 or call 777-2589. Art Course The USCDivision of Continuing Education will offer a short course in "Fundamentals of Drawing and Painting" Wednesday evenings July 10-Aug. 28. The course, held in Room 303 of Sloan College from 7:30-9:30 p.m., will be taught by Gloria Boles and will deal with the basic principles of drawing, composition and color theory. Tuition is $24 per person or $40 per married couple. For further information contact the Division of Continuing Education, the University of South -Carolina, Columbia, S. C. 29208 or call 777 2589. Bell Camp The University Union will sponsor a day camp program at the R. G. Bell Camp Recreation Facility this summer for children Af currently enrolled students and for children of faculty, staff or ilumni participating in the annual Bell Camp Membership Program. Four two-week sessions beginning June 17, July 8, July 22, and August 6 will, be offered for children 6-12 years old. The sessions will run Mondays through Fridays from 8 a.m.-1 p.m. with activities including swimming, canoeing, archery, crafts and athletic games. Cost per child is $20 per session. e. * Sudden Continued from Page 1 just one person did not eat the food." The different times when people ate, the different foods they ate, and the different places they ate would make it even more difficult to prove food poisoning. Despite Dr. Hirata's diagnosis, Dr. Biser said Friday afternoon he felt it was food poisoning. "Dr. Biser is sticking by his guns," Dr. Hirata said. "He is that kind of person. You have to prove him wrong. We are waiting for the samples to prove it." Sunday, Dr. Biser refused to discuss further the matter of the conflicting diagnoses, saying ,"I'm not going to talk to anybody, anymore, about anything to do with this." Although their diagnoses differ, Dr. Hirata does agree with the treatment Dr. Biser prescribed. "It is the exact same treatment for either one. The treatment is to relieve the symptoms in both cases. "Had the students been suffering from food poisoning they would have been sick for 24 to 48 hours. These cases were very, very mild from a clinical point of view," he concluded. Dr. Hirata also added that the students would not have responded so well to treatment if food poisoning were involved. However, Janet Spector, a visiting student at USC feels that many did not respond so well treatment. Spector spent the night of June 20 transporting other students to the infirmary and back again to the dorm, only to stay up with several who continued to be sick. She also brought girls back to the infirmary 1212 MA 256 i 80TijM ToP0 .H=AIC sAate se / Illness more than once. Spector was one of 150 high school students attending a journalism workshop at USC and 26 of her fellow visitors were sick. Also, many students who came to the infirmary were regular summer school students from South Building, South Tower, Douglas, Snowden and Moore dormitories. Others came from married students' housing, and off campus apartments. Several of the students said there were others in their dorm rooms who were sick but who did not want to come to the infirmary. Regarding the unusually fast spreading nature of the outbreak, Dr. Hirata said, "No, it is not unusual" for this many people t o become sick in such a short period of time. He said, "You take people like this coming in from all over the State and mix them up and you can come up with something like this. Each student has his own little infection to which some are immune and some aren't," he said. Further, Dr. Hirata said neither he, nor Dr. Biser were under any pressure from the University to reach an agreement on a diagnosis or to deny the possibility of food poisoning. ZIP KLEEN 1320 Main Street 1 Hour Cleaning 4 Hour Laundry Mon.-Fri. 7:30-6:00 Sat. 7:30-4:00 IN STREET 6626