07-01-94 PIC and SuperX Work Together to Build Scholars 6-1-94 PRIVATE INDUSTRY COUNCIL AND SUPER-X WORK TOGETHER TO EDUCATE FUTURE PHARMACISTS The Private Industry Council and the SuperX Corporation are offering scholarships and jobs for the fourth year in a row to Columbus area high school graduates with interests in pharmacology. With the help of Jobs for Columbus Grads and Columbus Public Schools, the program identifies hard-working, interested students and provides them with full tuition and expenses plus a part-time job working at an area SuperX while they attend college. After college, the are guaranteed a position as a professional pharmacist at a SuperX Store. Steve Wing, who is in charge of SuperX management training, has seen 27 students through the program since its inception. The 1994 SuperX scholarship recipients are Teyana Moore, Terrill Moses and Yolanda Hardy. All three have chosen to attend The Ohio State University. Even though Teyana Moore had her pick of scholarships, she chose to be a part of the SuperX program because it would not only pay her way through school, but also guarantee her a part- time job in her field during school and a professional position after graduation. In addition to her job at SuperX, she has worked in the pharmacy at Childrens Hospital and has completed the pharmacy program at Fort Hayes Metropolitan Education Center. She credits her teacher, Clarence "Buddy" Littrell at Fort Hayes, for showing her that she could find the resources to become a professional pharmacist. Her scholarship will pay her way through Ohio State's pharmacy program. Terrill Moses has been interested in science since he was eight years old and previously spent two summers in an Ohio State research program. Terrill has chosen the path of pharmacology because of its growing importance in the community. He will transfer to Ohio State's pharmacy program after finishing his first two years at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Terrill isn't the only one going back to school with the help of his scholarship. With his new self-sufficiency, the scholarship has opened the opportunity for his mother, a certified medical assistant, to send herself back to school to earn her medical degee. Yolanda Hardy had her choice of three different scholarships as a graduating senior from Eastmoor High School, but Yolanda's interests have always been in career as a pharmacist. Yolanda's severe childhood asthma caused her to become interested in pharmacology because of the various side-effects of her medication. She continued to show her interest as a teenager by volunteering for six years in the "Youth to Youth" program to caution against drug abuse through puppet shows she put on for small children. The program toured nationally, and Yolanda and her puppets performed in New York, Washington, D.C., and various cities in California. In addition to this, Yolanda took honors course work in chemistry and biology in high school. Her scholarship money will support her study in the pharmacy program at Ohio State. For Yolanda, the most important feature of the program is the guarantee of a job after graduation. "Five years down the line," Yolanda says, "I won't just have my credentials, I'll have a job." # This news release was written and distributed by the Private Industry Council of Columbus and Franklin County. For more information on the program, contact Linda Syguda at the Private Industry Council at 228-3907. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 01 Jul 1994 12:35:56 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.