Newspapers / Fayetteville State University Student … / Sept. 20, 1978, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE 4 THE VOICE SEPTEMBER 20, 1978 3 Standout Recruits Spartanette Signees Faced with the loss of Vivian Green, Mrs. Doris Mangrum, Norfolk State College’s women basketball coach, took steps to offset the departure of the four-year standout by signing three outstanding recruits. Coach Mangrum announced that Regina Taylor, a 5-7 guard, Sharon Wallace, a 5-11 forward- center, and Beverly Davis, a 6-0 center-forward, have agreed to join the roster of the 1978-79 Spartanettes. Miss Taylor and Miss Wallace hail from Bruton High, Williamsburg, Va. Miss Davis is a graduate of Suffolk High, Suffolk, Va. A shooting guard who plays the wing and excels on defense, Miss Taylor tallied 545 points and averaged 21 per game in her senior year of scholastic competition. Joining Miss Taylor in pacing Bruton High to a 20-6 record. Miss Wallace averaged 14 points and 21 rebounds per game. A versatile athlete, she also participated in track and field as a sprinter (220-24.5), high jumper (5’11”), hurdler (11.0) and long jumper (17’5”). Miss Davis who was selected as the best all-around player in the Virginia High School League’s Peanut District and set district tournament records in field goal percentage (68.4), most points (52), free throw percentage (75.0) and most blocked shots (5) averaged 21 points and 15 rebounds per game for a Suffolk High team that annexed district and regional championships. Have You Had The Feeling LOST 5. FOUND / ‘Excuse me but 1 seem to have lost my mind.” Tenth Annual Phillip Morris Market Communications Competition Will Award A Total Of $3,000 To Students NEW YORK, N.Y. -- Philip Morris Incorporated has announced its tenth annual Marketing- Communications Competition for College Students. The purpose of the competition is to provide students with a practical and realistic business project, bringing them into direct contact with the business community. A $1,000 grant will be awarded to the winning entries at both the undergraduate and graduate levels; runners up will receive $500 grants; and other finalists in the undergraduate and graduate categories will receive special merit awards. Entries may deal with any aspect of the broad areas of marketing-communications related to Philip Morris Incorporated, its non-tobacco operating companies or any of its non-tobacco products. Student chapters of professional societies, regular classes or ad hoc committees of no less than five students at the undergraduate level and no less than two at the graduate level under the counsel of full-time faculty members may submit proposals. A distinguished committee of marketing- communications experts will judge selected entries. They are: Engene H. Kummel, chairman of the board, McCann-Erickson; Mary Wells Lawrence, chairman of the board. Wells, Rich, Greene; Arjay Miller, dean, Stanford University Graduate School of Business; William Ruder, president. Ruder & Finn; and James C. Bowling, senior vice president, Philip Morris Incorporated. In addition to the grants, two student representatives and the faculty advisor from each of the winning and runner-up committees will be invited to be Philip Morris’s guests at corporate headquarters in New York or at another corporate location to discuss their proposals with Philip Morris executives. Philip Morris Incorporated, one of the world’s largest cigarette companies and producers of beverages, includes Philip Morris U.S.A., whose major brands are Marlboro - the number one selling cigarette in the world - Benson & Hedges lOO’s, Merit, Virginia Slims, and Parliament; Philip Morris International, which manufactures and markets a variety of brands, including Marlboro, through affiliates, licensees, and export sales organizations; Miller Brewer Company, brew of Miller High Life, Lite, and Lowenbrau brands; Seven-Up Company, producer of 7UP and Sugar Free 7UP soft drinks; Philip Morris Industrial, which makes specialty chemicals, paper, and packaging materials; and Mission Viejo Company, a community development and home building company in Southern California and Colorado. For additional information, please contact Marketing-Communications Competition, Philip Morris Incorporated, 100 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10017. Introducing: THE CLONE BAND (CPS) -- The scene may not have exactly coincided with the ones in the movies, but music promoter Danny O’Day scurried nervously from hospital room to hospital room on September 1. Sure enough, the bandages were slowly removed from the faces of the five patients until they were finally revealed: Elvis Presley, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, and Jim Croce. Well, sort of. In fact the people who’d just undergone plastic surgery were volunteers whose real names have yet to be released. After recuperating from operations that made three of them look like Morrison, Joplin, and Croce - two chose Presley faces - they’ll launch a 41- performance musical tour through the southeast. O’Day calls the resulting show “Rock and Roll Heaven,” billing it as “a non stop review of people’s deceased heroes.” If You Missed The August Edition Of The Voice, Copies Are Still Available Omission In the Sandra Walden article that appeared in the August edition, it was inadvertently omitted that her trip was supported by the 1978- 79 Student Government Association and was coordinated by Ms. Bettye McKee of the business department and Mr. Irving Veazie, advisor of the SGA. THE VOICE regrets the omission. CATALOG of COLLEGIATE RESEARCH Over 10,000 listings! All subjects. Send NOW forthis FREE catalog. (offer expires Dec. 31,1978) Send to: COLLEGIATE RESEARCH P.O. Box 84396, Los Angeles, CA. 90073 ^mEritau diToUcgiatt Snt[)ologp International Publications is sponsoring a Rational CoUege ^oetrp Contts Fall Concours 1978 open to all college and university students desiring to have their poetry anthologized. CASH PRIZES will go to the top five poems: $100 First Place $50 Second Place $25 Third Place $10 $10 AWARDS of free printing for ALL accepted manuscripts in our popular, handsomely bound and copyrighted anthology, AMERICAN COLLEGIATE POETS. Deadline: October 31 Congo Ifleeting A Congo meeting was held Wednesday, September 13, 1978 and the officers for the 1978-79 school year were elected. The new officers are as follows: President - David Murrell, Vice-President - Gail Davis, Secretary-reporter - Brenda Herring, Treasurer - Fernando Andrews, Parliamentarian - Shirley Wallace, and Miss CONGO - Betty Jenkins. Mr. C.I. Brown, advisor of the Congo, was the guest speaker. CONTEST RULES AND RESTRICTIONS: 1. Any student is eligible to submit his verse. 2. All entries must be original and unpublished. 3. All entries must be typed, double-spaced, on one side of the page only. Each poem must be on a separate sheet and must bear, in the upper left hand corner, the NAME and ADDRESS of the student as well as the COLLEGE attended. Put name and address on envelope also! There are no restrictions on form or theme. Length of poems up to fourteen lines. Each poem must have a separate title. (Avoid "Untitled"!) Small black and white illustrations welcome. The judges' decision will be final. No info by phone! Entrants should keep a copy of all entries as they cannot be returned. Prize winners and all authors awarded free publication will be notified immediately after deadline. I.P. will retain first publication rights for accepted poems. Foreign language poems welcome. There is an initial one dollar registration fee for the first entry and a fee of fifty cents for each additional poem. It is r^puested to submit no more than ten poems per entrant. All entries must be postmarked not later than the above deadline and fees be paid, cash, check or money order, to: INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATIONS 4747 Fountain Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90029 4. 8.
Fayetteville State University Student Newspaper
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Sept. 20, 1978, edition 1
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