The News Argus, May, 1982, Page 7
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'CONGRATULA
G RftDU ATING
S,EN'fOJS
GM”. - .
RECEIVING YOUR Tl£K£T
-TO the lawd or
OPPORTUNITIES
Greg Jones — Reporter/Photographer
^ V S ' s
Darryl Scalcs - Cartoonist
A
Senior
Week Activities
Tuesday, May 11, 1982
8 p.m.
Splash Party
C.E. Gaines Center
♦Wednesday, May 12,
1982, 9 p.m. - 2 a.m.
Nostalgic Cocktail Party
Illusions Club
550 N. Liberty Street
Thursday, May 13, 1982
11 a.m.
Class Picnic at Hanging Rock Park
Bus will leave Student Union
Friday, May 14, 1982
7 p.m.
Alumni Induction Banquet
Student Union (Invitational)
9 p.m.
Alumni Disco
♦Illusions Club
Seniors must present Banquet Invitation
for $3.00 admission.
Saturday, May 15, 1982
10 a.m.
Commencement Rehearsal
Memorial Coliseum
4 p.m.
Nursing Pinning Ceremony
Hall-Patterson Communications Building
Sunday, May 16, 1982
8:30 a.m.
Chancellor & Mrs. Covington’s Breakfast
(For Seniors and their families)
10:30 a.m.
Commencement Rehearsal
Memorial Coliseum
Sunday, May 16, 1982
3 p.m.
Commencement Exercises
Memorial Coliseum
♦Students must present University ID and proof of age at these activities.
Loretta Leak - Reporter
Manpower Seeks Workers
Even though college students look
forward to summer vacation, they
don’t look forward to their frantic
search for summer jobs. This year s
search will be especially intense as
students try to find jobs that will sup
plement waning student grants and
loans.
This year, Manpower Inc., the
world’s largest temporary service firm,
expects to hire 50,000 students for tem
porary assignments, mostly in office
work. Temporary work offers both in
come and practical work experience
that goes beyond classroom learning.
Wages for temporary assignments
vary from area to area, but are com
petitive with entry-level wages for per
manent jobs. The exact wage a tem
porary employee will earn depends on
the work-ready skills that person has.
There are other important advantages
to working as a temporary employee.
Students gain information on which to
base career choices. They acquire first
hand information about skills required
for specific jobs, demand for these
skills, and the latest trends in office
technology. It also offers them an op-
See Page 10
Disease Is Unreported
From Page 3
in the treatment and possibly even in
the care of herpes is the use of the car
bon dioxide laser. The treatment costs
$300, provides instant relief of painful
herpetic sores by vaporizing them and
destroying the virus locally, with little
effect of the surrounding normal cells.
A new drug Acycolvir, developed by
Burroughs Wellcome C. of Research
Triangle Park and approved by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
will shorten the healing time for the in
fections. The drug will be introduced
this month under the brand name
Zovirax for S15-S20 per tube. It will
only help some people who suffer from
herpes.
There are no verifiable statistics
available on the incidence of genital
herpes because herpes is largely an
unreported disease. State laws do not
require that herpes be reported to
health departments. The WSSU Infir
mary has not had any reported cases of
herpes, despite earlier reports that
there was a list out.
Aid Concerns Students
From Page 5
past. “By sending off an application
late, you’re compounding the issue,”
he said. As of the end of April, many
students said that they had not yet sent
off for financial aid. Even though they
planned to, they expressed no deep
concern.
Jordan advises that students be
accurate about their summer earnings
on the application for financial aid
because it will have a bearing on the
amount they will receive.