University of South Carolina Libraries
Vn WSE"Ssiorte.. att"ns you hmwmrl Nnn ow take yond agnu &ned,bas,in endWmd them with wenchfor instance... leheou ohe crationeor me...6 Wmn..she is JCOe(/E p AARTY More sulbilined faces and peeling noses . . . Signia Chi Derby ay arllnd the corner . . . mi id-semester exams . . . May Day ciotest-congrats to the finalist's . .. Cheer leader tryouts . . . readY for those Sqwilnig 11(0idays-let's go to the heach. ROMAN OR(GY The (ors swing in . . . the d(ors swing (it . . . Some pass in and others PASSED OUT . . . Sig Eps and dates living it up in old Roarnin style . . . Nancy Frye and Jim Harfield, Norma Nance and hill G(1oing. (Cl'(rl McElveenl and Ozzie Corley, Billie l1a-rrisoi and Mitch Stevens, Brenda Truett and Jimmy Smith. Charlent- 1)augitery and Tom Leonard, Virginia Green and Ben llisiiger. Connie Getsinger and Kelley Jones, lary Ami and Toim McNeeley, Jerri Iarriot and Don lluth. .ioaIll 1llleniain and ('arl Mc 'lendon. Jean Wallace and Hill Avre. Audrey land and Ray (rde, Blobbie Edwards an<d Al Hiors. ILinda I owe and George Meeks. Pam ( Crawford and Jlohn I Dalisa, Carolyi Iloneycut t and George Seals. Ly nida Callady and Neal Mmnette. and .losanne VerderY and Btlddv Powell LAMBDA CHI'S CELEI ATE FLouIdler's i . . . last weekend . . . Vrihy Hitte at the banquet were . . . Barbara Taylor and Ken Wood, IIarriett I)eLoache and John Orr, RosemariY Hankins and Tom Croft, Pam Warner and Rert Shiuler, and many alumni. Saturday nite . . . at tihe party . . . celebrating some more were . . . Ann Jackson and GrLber Sires. Fran Powell and Benny Ilagins, Betsy Drennan and 11arry II arkey, Kaye Moyer and Ronny Howey, Hess Shuler and Roger Chastine, Kathv Childress and Walt Lancaster. PUT A RING Ol my finger . . . at hat'.s exactly*' what he did Kay Kaiser (ADPi) is engaged to .Jim (r do(nl (P1hi Kap), andI Nancy Ricker to 'harles Webb (U'niversity ( Va. alumnus). IT'S SPItING ALL IlGHT Anld here's another pinning to pwoe it . . . Becky Smith is pinned to Henry Philpot (Phi Kapia Sigma). AT THIE SEASIIOItE Sunning and funning . . . last week at FoIlly Beach ...were these Pi Kappa Pi~'s and ttes . . . Sandra Banks and D)on Bryant, ('arol Muninm amid ('yruls Ileshmati, 'harlot te Stribling and D)oug Grbay. .lnyee luckles andI D ickie Prea;cher, Susan WoodI and .lamies Whatl1ey, ~Jane Sexto andt Jamies ILonig, Illarr'ia Let mal I Hill Sewell, and IHonev TeXrrv aund 1Duck (utt s. OFF" AND) lI'NNIN' Poist t ime . . . at t he Palmen t to) Trials . . . last. week . F ootie WVolfte and G ene D avis, Vi rgiia MIcFadlgin andl Ted Owenus. Katie (Colenmani and1 A rn ie Webb, A-ILina Tlice andl Tony J1oh nson, and Mary Anin Newnman and1( Mike G 'aillard. .JIST STITFF" S'eems like every body's got t hat Spring F'ever .. ..even he prots . . . one well-known English professor asked his stud(enIts about t heir part -timue jobs so that he could throw a little business their way . .. so happened t hat one stutdent works for O)akhiwn! A not her D a vis ( ol lege pr'ofm. greei t ed his 8 o'clockL class by st atigtaleha rsn fr'm reu ?Np S. C. Library ESE Group Gives Scholarship The University School of Edl tirat ion has annfounfcedl an aiva'il able scholar'shi p of $200.00 givenM annually by the South Carolina liIigh School Library Associat iont to a studlent who plans to take as much as 18 hours in Library Science. 'The applicants must live in South Carolina at the time of NS~' ASS application, andI preference is - given to former membmers of the South Carolina liigh School Li-SAN birary Association1. Application blanks can he oh tained from Miss Nancy Burge in room 207, Wardlaw, or Miss Nancy Jane Day, State Superin tendent of School Libraries, Eeyhr State Department of Education, ' ouba L U 1005 MainSStreet .. cha wenches I wee ZTA Hold Z t a Tau Alpha~ soorrity will hold( its St ardust Ball tonight from 8-12 in the hallroom of the .Jefferson I lotel. Music wvill be furished11' by the Hearts. Officers of the sorority are: SOCIETY D)EADLINE All stories and pictures to be uised (on the society pages moust, he t u r n e d into "The G al m' e e o k " office by five 0'clock on M o n dia y after noonsl. FOR YOUR OUTFITS 00,. eMA/N 51| J . . . Use the location ely at most convenient to YOUll WMHIfft DRY & CLEANERS It seems as tho' it vould have been Just as emy to give them Logic,too... sI Formal w -~ Jaine Worknian Dot Neal Mary Busbee LuannelU Sanders, president, Jane WVork man, vice - president, Pat M o r r i s , recording secretary, Heth Miller, treasurer, Dot Neal, historian, and Mary Busbee and Hobby Edwards, social chairmen. CAI1UID I 6M2I m' Summe: In a small, unprepossessing of fice in Frankfurt, Germany, stands a file listing 3,000 jobs open to American college students who want to work in Europe this summer. The file belongs to two venturesome young men from the United States, Ramsey Harris and James Lauf, who met four years ago, at a time, Harris says, "When we were both living in Europe and looking around for something interesting to do." The idea they hit upon, a combination summer - employment and travel bureau with starchy moral over tones ("The primary aim is to promote better understanding among the peoples of different nations"), is known as A. S. I. S., or the American Student Infor iation Service. And in just a few seasons of grubbing and plug ging ("Our first winter," Harris says, "I sold my Volkswagen as an act of self-preservation"), they have turned it into a full scale business-one with a news value that can best be understood by any student who has ever said to his college placement office that he'd like a summer job and what would be the chances of finding something in Europe. Those who work as mediators between people's dreams and the world's realities are likely to be tough-minded, and college place ment directors are no exception. Skilled practitioners of the art of discouragement, they have spared students none of the unpleasant truths about the difficulties of lining up a worthwhile short term job abroad. They have talked about the language barrier and about red tape in getting the work permits required for all overseas jobs except those with the U. S. Government and the United Nations (jobs have been known to fold before the red tape was unwound.) Most of all, they have talked about the scarcity of jobs in Europe, especially for aliens. Relentlessly, they have underlined the exceptional good CANDY M AT LOC E SH OPPE We were restIess fo customers. SL3uddeI BATIIK ! .Just the I collectionf of sumiii uli, comfortably co SPORT COAT! Imported E SP( "V 1 .. G r Jobs In fortune of those well-publicized students who manage to cut the costs of a European summer by selling perfume in Paris, fol lowing the grape harvest through Italy or peddling the Herald Tribune on the streets of Copen hagen. Hunting for a summer job in Europe, the placement people have said, is the occupa tion of an illusionist. Students are better off working here in the States, perhaps as waitresses at a beach or mountain resort, and using the summer's take five or six or seven hundred dol lars-for a holiday in Europe the following year. There are still many students who could do worse than follow this advice, even if they were offered one of the jobs sponsored by the American Student Infor mation Service. As a European based enterprise, A. S. I. S. has suceeeded--where Statesside job hureaus founder -- in tracking down the kinds of overseas jobs that. American students can fill in the summer without, as Ram1 sey llarris explains, "upsetting the labor situation of a foreign country." 1ut'these are hard and for the m1nost part menial jobs (one reason. probably, w h y A. S. I. S. can arrange the neces sary work permits.) A girl might be placed as a nurse's aid in a German hospital, where she would begin work at six thirty each morning, feeding pa tients, making beds, washing Why Pay More i When You C To 70 PIC-A-PAIl 1635 M ILK COFFEE SANDI MANY CONVENIEI ATIONS ON CAMF DISTRIBUTING C r some11thing new~ anid ilTerentit fo1 y fromi the Soutih 19ei lie weL sig, hiing ! So we barite red forii a coii rwi~ear* mi same . .. mys~ tei 1u4s, e, ...dacron-cotton and atik ...................... $35 3RT SHIRTS ..... ..... $ 6 IM and PLAY TRUNKS . . 1% Cotton Javatex $ 5 You're invited to use our exclusive AMECOCK CHARGE ACCOUI Europe dishes, equipment and eye n floorm. Or she might work as a counselor in a French camp for children, or as a dishwasher at a Swiss resort, or on a farm in England picking fruit hour after hour. Men students tare often placed in factory and construe tion work. A. S. I. S. always warns students that the summer i will be an exacting one: "Thv European working (lay is . . . longer and harder than the one you are used to. You will have to adapt yourself to an entirely new environment. If you do not think you will be able to adapt, or if you are not prepared to work hard, you should not apply for a job." And both Ramsey and Lauf emphasize that in the four to eight weeks students work. they can't expect to earn more than room, board and a little poc ket money. Still, in spite of ad monitions, a girl who has never held a job hefore, never been on her own, and who delights in comforts and a conventional good time is sometimes overwhelied on an1 A. S. I. S. assignment by wlhat. after a week or so, may suddenly seem a drabN way to dt the ( Continent. ("Once in E. rope," a Califo)rnia girl said, "I couldn't see working all day when I could be out traveling.") The students who return home happiest about the summer are the independents, the adventures. ile life-eaters. thie searchers (Continued on page 10) or Spring Shoes an Save Up Yo at t SHOES? cein St. NICHES 'IT US 0., INC. .00' .95 .95i' Ttc