University of South Carolina Libraries
Upward Bound 'Make Them Q1 By SUSAN ROSS bring a question to their minds. If Faculty Editor they go in with one question, we Upward Bound will be reachinglwant them to leave with a out this summer in search of a thousand," said a spokesman of method to interest capable children USC's Upward Bound. who have not been given the neces- Upward Bound has recently been sary motivation to achieve. funded for the third time with a "The purpose of the program is $128,952 grant by the Office of not to educate the children, but to Economic Opportunity. interest them in education, to The teachers and their asistants Caroliniana Society Preserves History The University South Caroliniana Society wants to ac curately preserve the history of South Carolina. A group of around 1,100 members, it collects historical records, letters, manuscripts and family diaries that pertain Uto the state's history. Claude H. Neuffer, English professor and recently elected president of the society, called the collection "the fin(.st collection of original sources dealing with South Caro lina that can be found anywhere in the world. "It's not an unusual thing to find professors from the great universities all over the country who come here to find original sources," he said. Members of the society are primarily persons who are interested in preserving the state's history properly, said Neuf fer. The documents and maiuscripts are also useful to under graduates who have to do term papers that require original research, he said. E. L. Inabinet, who directs the operation of the South Caroliniana, is secretary-treasurer of the society, a post he has held since 1958. BEACH HATS ARMY FATIGUES LEVIS - LEE RIDERS WRANGLERS to or Most Anything MOE LEVY'S CORNER LADY & ASSEMBLY Aim Is Liestion will be allowed to take students on field trips or camping trips. instructing them in what the stu dents want to know. "The professor is allowed to take the students anywhere and may do anything he thinks will benefit them educationally or culturally,' said the Upward Bound spokes man. "The project takes children with potential for college or high school who are, however, not motivated. We attempt to get them into col. lege, and once they get in we no longer have any official connec tion although we do try to keep up with them," he said. "The national program Upward Bound is to be transferred to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare July 1. The program tries to go in and break the pov erty cycle," he said. "Nationally, Upward Bound re suits are pretty good. Eighty per cent of the students involved with the program go to college. They would not otherwise have gone tc college. In fact, it's a requirement that they lack the way to get int< college," he said. Once in school, 51 per cent of the students go back as sopho mores, as compared with the na tional average of 54 per cent, he said. The USC program, the only one develol!ed by a major university in the southeast, has full-time em ployees in the Pendleton Huilding including a director and a secre tary. The professors are the ones that are mo-t excited about the new project this summer, he said They will teach only two courses (luring the summer, one for the first three and one-half weeks an< one for the last three and one-half CORRECTION Dr. Lawrence Flaum is assistan' 'to the president for special proj ects. His title was incorrectly giver as "vice president for advance< I studies and research" in last Fri day's issue of The Gamecock. 1411 GERVAIS ST. THE NEW & DI Fiesta Columbia's Larj Fine Food . . . ALL YOU CAN Ei Tan3 onh The older folk! It turns on a ne a natural Hawaiian tai Becat coconut natural tanning rays. Mi A full I A Says Visiting Americ Ily KITTY McCASKII.L Staff Writer Little rules like what time a girl has to be in andt how many cuts a student can take are much stricter here than in England, according to James Campbell, visi'ing professor from Oxford University. Campbell has been teaching in the history department this semes ter. "Outside Wales there are rarely rules about alcohol on campuses in Biritain and there is only one I university in Wales with these rules," Campbell said. "There is a drug problem in I qfZmjL43M TIME SUN.-THUR. 11:30-1:45 FRIDAY 11:30-1:45-530-7:30 FFERENT. Buffet ~est Selection of T ......... 4 agro( 'our b Shave their own tanning prod w breed of sun worshipers. TI - deeper, faster. Only Tany; ise Tanya has Hawaii's favori1 oil and cocoa butter. So Tan' ike today happen ..,. your wa) ne of suntan produCts for tod CAL-LLo LeoN lb UETAIDu 4 LYN DON FuNGQ5FA6 gjts Is A MEM6I6 OF A.A, Y toN qF WIER AS&NIIC.. IPA /( CA TO ftAI 61PANI Z4TlOAJ Wffil MA/? AP Cb C .)JR riI WC A.I~&AX~ C.m RE TIR& D OF te Nov6, ft THE Aon-Est"OUS STA(QF bfNvt of pU wAS TlIts (.MomP Nba-~t- 51A6G6 IS AfSrm.6~ - v 5 9tl 4 L ( SIg wTlt CtI 4 on r-o v onENed LMt ; ma Professor an Univ soI English universities-almost exclusively concerned with mari juana," he said. "Although it is a cause for a great deal of wvorry, it hasn't really become a major probldem. "In general if a university has reason to think that someone is a dlanger to other people it will get rid of him. Nonetheless, it isn't always easy to decide what is the best thing to do. There is the old; problem that the more strict the authorities are, the more anxious students are to cover up for some one." According to Campbell except at three universities there have been no student rebellions which "would seem at all serious in comparison to what has happened on many campuses here." Campbell, who says he likes Co luurbia "quite a lot," said that the education systems of the two coun tries are so different that it's hard to compare them. "I'm used to a specialized degree system with one subject. There are both advantages and1 disadI vantages to your system. The c'hief adv~antage is that students~ )Ves ody. Jcts. Tanya is new. lat's you. You want i can give it to you. e tanningagents - ra boosts the sun's ... get with Tanya. sy's sun children - at your bookstore. O0NUT OIL AND COCOA BUTTER 5 IT-C1 oi GeNt A m S 0OV I r Hg ( Assou . AN W6 6*96PWA i t4 ymr.. I SuT $IA ser16ouW_ .K bvroQki NVvFAC ar OLue N O WCTANu IYbSOU) )5 ~s *6"r UiP6r JJ F* bIAAT have a somewhat better o1por tjnity to dliscover in which sub)ject they 're interested. "Students are much more varied here. In England one wouldn't get so wide a range of good and had studlents in one class," he r-on tinued. A merican students are much less well-prepared in high school than English students, he said. "I would say there are a minimum of' two y'ears behind." English students have usually dlecidled what field they want to enter before they start college, he' Faculty Footnotes G EG Grai The office of Economic Oppor tunity has awarded a $611,8u0 grant to I)r. Fel ix l.auter, associate pro fessor of biology, and lI)r. .John Lease, pharmacy professor, for re - search related to pa ra sit ismi andI malnutrition in South Carolina. lI)r. .John I'. I )dau of the hi ist ory department is the (co-author with August F'ranzen of the l'niversity of Freiburg of a book, History of the Church, just published by Uerder and Herder of New York. T'he work was translated from IVTV e t* sta h edthus A1V asnePwha bee<r opblus stick. l-or a hcathsb, c glou. Shin it 0 er md hare. Ceeks. Ch in. (1 r ou rich. In one shahd ie ra Ceofp r. It a hed ant-hie.Anldo.g lrostae, too.) New 'Terra Cop b R OEO Gaia The Campus Shno 9Tz OATe A3U E F W6 L Mi'AT AAIU CKG 4 fOF(4 SoLJ6D0 TErctL& rom E SV5 i40 . IT T44C FIpE MAJESTCAtL, c>*F 7 -e Stricter said. "Since University courses are specialized, it is harder for people who don't know what they want to do. On the other hand since high schools are so much more advanced than here, people have more data to help them decide before they go to college." The graduate system is also very different in England, according to Campbell. "On the whole there is less course work and more em phasis on the disertation. The P.Phil., the major research degree, depends virtually entirely on the dissertation." i1 Given Gernum by Peter Becker. USC his tory instructor. The director of the USC Insti tute of Archaeology and Anthro jiology. I )r. Rtobert L. Stephenson, has published three articles con cerning excavations done byv him while with the Smithsonian Institu t ion. Tw"o of the articles are book re views of Excavations at Stillhouse Hollow and The Gilbert Site pub lishied in the .Anmerican Anthro pologist. Ion lR I afl l. daSV-to-UISt -althy, co~pper-br1on/c keup. Or gleami it on ' ery nhere!) It colors -1for all omple)Ixion's: tit by heclpinig of (.olor up thle night, it comes per' Face GlIeamer ev Ion (In Russell House)