Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 06, 1990, Page 17, Image 36

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    MBA PROGRAM
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA MBA
Located near Atlanta, the South's business hub. the Georgia MBA otters
• One-year MBA program for exceptional individuals .vith busress degre-s
• Two-year program tor other candidates
• 11 elective courses allow me creation of
specialized areas of expertise
• Excellent microcomputer facilities enhanced bv a $2 million iBM grant
• Assistantships w fee waver. MBA internship and placement services low , os: :t ivnq
and renowned faculty
Write or call MBA Program Director
351 Brooks Hall. GSB.
UGA Athens. GA 306C2
(404) 542-5336
Circle No 10
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Consider a career in
CYTOTECHNOLOGY the
diagnosis ot cancer through
the microscopic evaluation
of cells. This allied health
profession is a great way to
apply your science degree.
For an informational packet
contact
MCHV School of
Cytotechnology
DeGoesbriand Unit
Burlington, Vermont
05401
802-656-5133
MOTEL CAREER ADVICE Insignis >or
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SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
MOTHER'S HELPERS NEEDED
For summer positions n the New
York and New England areas
Saianes range !rom S'25 to S’ ’5
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or a ile lot an applicator to OVF R
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300 BEDFORD ST
STAMFORD CONN >3901
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College Liam Open Company sp
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22 year old summer siocx music the
atre company singer ore? es
•••a musroans. put>nc;fy director.
cook piano accompanists oo« :>xc
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SUMMER EMPLOYMENT IN
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Room. Board provided at a nominal
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Therapeutic Camps r Texas need
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Needs p'txjrarr director.-.
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CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED
Boston a/ea top ifvtf g conditions ard
pay* 1000)243-42%
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Wranglers housekeecinq, food
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Openings 'or 50 from May 10 to September '5 Needs waitpeo
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Salaries include mom and board Minimum age 13. tetters Qt
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LOT Me | UJTS-W
LOT S-M
TTTPWi
LOT C-02 1 LOT C 91
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JOHN RE III* *'t . A • T Af, .i M
College The Game was created by two students at Rutgers U. They hope to market it to
other universities around the country
Game
Continued from page 15
ternity sorority version of the game
“But then I thought, why sell something
to only 10 percent of the population ’"
Levin said
The two targeted the beginning of the
1989-90 academic vear for the release of
the game but had to overcome trademark
law, so the process was dragged out
'You can't use Rutgers' name on a
product without their permission. We
figured it was better to do things legally
than try to get around it,” Keating said
In exchange for the use. of its name, the
university will receive 6 5 percent of the
profits in royalties The university's
office liaison had to approve the game's
final version to make sure “everything
was in good taste,” Keating said
And the hands uf the administrators
show- Students mat notice the omission
of some prominent aspects of student life
— including .1 local pub
Student author capitalizes
on dreams, childhood magic
By Alistair Ling
■ ' tit* I mi y Pennsylvac an
U of Pennsylvania
“You need to feel the freedom of child
hood," said Paul Borgese a U of
Pennsylvania senior, who has published
twochildren’sbooks “1 feelthatchildren
are attracted to the magic of everyday
things 1 look for magic in the everyday
world."
Borgese sees trees sprouting bub
blegum, salt and pepper shakers fleeing
the dinner table and clothes fighting
over closet space The two books, On the
Other Side and If Fish Went Peopling,
are used in about 50 kindergartens in
Philadelphia and New York.
"I enjoyed writing children’s poems
and found that there was a market for
it," Borgese said. "Besides, if' authors
like Robert Louis Stevenson and
Rudyard Kipling could focus their work
on children, then it wasn't below me to
do tho same.”
In 1981, the would be song-writer,
unable to find a musical partner, began
writing poetry I Its works were initially
geared toward an adult audience, but
soon he found a bigger market for chil
dren's works Two years later, Borgese
worked with illustrators to produce his
first book. On the Other Suit'
And while at a children's book conven
tion in Philadelphia his freshman year,
he secured a publishing contract.
Nathan Levy, of the Princeton, N .1
based N I. Associations Inc , said he
was almost immediately struck by
Borgeses creativity
Borgese is currently working on a third
work, a color story book about a “chi 1
dren's type of romance." He said the story
is completed, but not the illustrations
He said he plans to continue writing,
even though the books have brought him
a slender income so far “The money is
minimal," he said
Sea
Continued from page 14
of the next port of call.
There are no weekends off, however,
because the time spent on shore substi
tutes for weekends, Duiker said,
explaining that students are free to do
as they wish when the ship docks.
Students who have used the program
generally speak highly of it "It just
changes your whole outlook on life,"
Sorrentino said.
But, she added, coming hack to
America "was like running into a brick
wall. You've seen so much you can hard
ly contain it " Sorentino 'aid she
changed her major after the trip and
said she is considering entering the
Peace ('orps
UP student Alice Grosz had seen one
of the dOO fliers publicizing Semester at
Sea around campus and decided to check
out the program. “I want to see the
world," Grosz said
The only complaint Grosz has is the
expense The cost to enroll in Semester
at Sea ranges from $8,695 to $11,525
depending on type of accommodation
Expenses cover room and board trips
inland cost extra.
However, Susan Mauriello, who went
on the program in the fall of 1987,
adamantly urged prospective Semester
at Sea students to workout any financial
difficulties they may encounter.
'Beg, borrow, do what you have to,
because you can't even imagine how
worth it it is." she said.