Newspapers / Meredith College Student Newspaper / Sept. 13, 1982, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Meredith College Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAQ£4 THE TWfQ SEPTEMBER 13. 1962 Freshman Elections!!!! REQULATIONS FOR CAMPAIQNINQ! Each candidate is allowed to have TWO 8^/^x 11 posters on each hail of each dorm. THREE posters of the same size are allowed In Cate Center or on the information tx^ards adjacent to Cate Center and the Library. No posters are allowed on tt>e glass doors in Cate Center. No posters or table flyers are allowed in the dining hall or on the doors entering the dining hall. Also, no posters are allowed In the class buildings or in Johnson Hall. Flyers are allowed to be distributed at each door In the donns and door to door campaigning Is encouraged. Anyone violating these regulations will have their posters removed. After elections have been held, each candidate is required to remove her posters from the sites at which they were placed. If a candidate is involved in a runoff election, her posters may remain up until the rurhoff results are tallied, then they should be removed promptly. AM campaign paraphernalia should be removed within 24 hours of the results of that FRESHMAN ELECVONS! Filing Begins: September 9 Filing Ends: September 14 Speeches: September 17 at S.G.A. meeting Voting: September 21 Lunch & Dinner Runoffs: ^ptember 23 QET INVOLVED! election. If there are any questions concerning this, or any other facet of the elections process, please contact me at 82B- 5890. Miss MC'USA Pageant To Be Held The TWIG staff encourages all students to participate in student elections and wishes luck to all candidates. &iter now to compete in the official preliminary to the Miss USA and Miss Universe Pageants. The search is on for women to compete in the 1982 Miss North Caroiina'USA Pageant to be telecast live from Winston-Salem on November 27, 1982. The winner will represent the State in the nation2d CBS telecast of the Miss USA Pageant next Spring. If you are single and between the ages of 17 and 24 as of May 1, 1983 you may qualify. There Is no talent competition. Enter now to compete for the prestigious title and prizes including $1,500.00 in cash; special awards of jewelry, clothing and cosmetics; an all expense paid trip to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida to be a guest of honor of the Miss Florida Pageant; an all expense paid trip to compete in the Miss USA Pageant; a custom-designed State costume to represent North Carolina in the' Miss USA Pageant and much more! The Miss North Carolina- USA Pageant is a production of Tel-Air Interests, Inc., the leading producer of motion pictures, television programs and commercials in the Southeastern United States. For your FREE entry infonnation, send a post card with your name, address, age and telephone number to Tel- Air interests, Inc., 1755 NE 149 Street, Miami, FL 33181, or call Bartaara Bergin at (305) 944-3266. collegiate crossword Apply for Internships O Edward ACROSS 1 H>v1e mogul Marcus 5 Heroic tale 9 Song syllable \2 Tne state of being undamaged 15 Pa1 )6 Its capital is Dacca 17 Nobel chemist 18 The art of putting on plays 19 Pearson and Kaddox 21 Vegas 22 Drink to excess 23 Hiss 26 Italian painter 27 Screenwriter Anita 28 Devilishly s1y 31 Decline 32 Devices for refining flour 33 Teachers organi zation 34 Shore protectors (2 wds.] 36 Machine part Collegiate cwv7-^ 37 Type of music 38 Doesn't eat 39 The Sunflower State 40 Part of APB, to police 41 All-too conmon excuse (2 wds.) 43 Short opera solo 47 Grotto 48 Part of the hand 50 Made do 51 Prevents 52 AUe 53 U.S. caricaturist 54 Farm storage place DOWN foes t Conservatives for short 2 Go length (ramble) 3 Famous volcano 4 Hoves jerkily 5 Hollywood populace 6 Sheriff Taylor 7 "Golly" 8 — as an eel 9 Size of some want-ads (2 wds.) [Answers on Page 7\ 10 Regretful one 11 Vanderbilt and Lowell 13 Acquit 14 "The Lord is My 15 Veal' — 20 Extends across 22 Turkic tribesmen 23 Mr, Guinness 24 Spanish for wolf 25 Retrace (3 wds.) 26 Disproof 28 Ends, as a broadcast (2 wds.) 29 Like Felix Unger 30 Head inventory 32 Hurt or cheated .35 Glided 36 Lead minerals 38 Coquette 40 Take (pause) 41 Finished a cake 42 Football trick 43 "Rock of " 44 Anklebones 45 Work with soil 46 Too 49 New Deal organi zation Each semester more than 250 students from colleges and universities across the country come to Washington, D.C. to work as interns under the auspices of the Washington Center for Learning Alternatives. Tt>ey gain experience and academic credit for working full time in Congressional, Executive or Judlcl^ offices; public (Trtereart xiraint »ths*«r national associations, or private businesses. The WCLA internship Program, open to juniors and seniors In all academic majors, includes: placement; orientation, counseling, supenrision, and evaluation of intern progress; academic seminars and group discussions with other interns; guest lectures; social and cultural events with other interns; and centrally-located housing. WCLA Is not a credit- granting institution; It does, however, function as an adjunct to the university- college campus. Students participating in the internship program receive from their home institutions academic credit. WCLA Internship placements sites have inoKiOeel aueh diawee eeHlr»fle qualified Washington professionals (attorneys. Congressional staff, policy analysts, etc.) and cover a distinct area of an academic discipline. Seminar offerings include: “Trial by Jury,” "Art Comes to the Nation’s Capital,” "U.S. Foreign Policy in the Third World,” "Petro- Dollars,” and "An Inside Look at the Washington Press CfliiBSJi. as the U.S. Congress, the C.C. Superior Court, the U.S. State Department, the National Tnjst for Historic Preservation, the U.S. Department of Commerce, NBC News, the AFL-CIO, the Smithsonian, the National Institutes of Health, Common Cause, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. VWI:LA requires all students to enroll in one of our seminars, which are taught by Susan Donna PatrfoLa Denise Patty Loretta Pafcrtda Susan Mazy Aone Betty Susan We are the women irtio mafedp nie nenUng Center aidh a special plaoe, providing pTGEopt and pereooal paUent^vlflDted oare to woman of aS ages. We know your needs. WeVe been bereDiffyQUSlnoe 1974. dan 781-6BB0 aaorttma Aocurate, noKMud^BEQsntal tnformaaon, whenever you need It, from the rasouroe center ftg* agnial health, na Itaaii^ Owtar, Saa. 3613 ^wolb Dxlve Rale^N.C. 87609 PORM HFE iSe.WN& Room and Private Home for serious senior, $154 plus one-third otilities. Rent reductions available. Call 467-2730. The application deadline for the 1983 Winter Quarter Internship Program is October 15; for the 1983 Spring Semester, November 1, 1982. For an application and more program Information, write or call; The internship Program, The Washington Center for Leaming Alternatives, 1705 DeSales Street, N.W., Washington, D.C, 20036. (202) 659-8510. SOME OF THE MOST IMPORTANT WORKFOR CANCER IS BEING DONE OUTSIDE THE LAB. It's being cJone by people likeModeline Mitza ond Theresa Borbieri. They met v/hen Mode 11 ne was i n treol- menf for breast concer and Thereso vras the volunteer who drove her to her therapy op- pointmenls. Now, lil^e ihereso, Modeline is bringing helpand hope to others os a Reach to Recovery volunteer The v«5rli in the lab must continue. So must the woric outside. We need your help. SHARE THE COST OFUYINet Give to the • Americon Concer Society Ttus span contnbutM w a puOkc sarn».
Meredith College Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1982, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75