The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, May 09, 1969, Page Page Five, Image 5
Upward Bound
'Make Them Qi
By SUSAN ROSS bring a question to their minds. If
Faculty Editor they go in with one question, we
Upward Bound will be reaching want 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 E ;,conomic Opportunity.
interest them in education, to, The teachers and their assistants
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
.to the state's history.
Claude H1. Neuffer, English professor and recently
elected president of the society, called the collection "the
finest 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
Neuffer.
The documents and mamuscripts 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
Caroiniana, is secretary-treasurer of the society, a )ost he
has held since 1938.
BEACH HATS
ARMY FATIGUES
LEVIS - LEE RIDERS
WRANGLERS
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
(o anything he thinks will benefit
them educationally or culturally,"
said the Upward Hound 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 (o try to keep
up with them," he said.
"The national program Upward
Hound 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 to
college. In fact, it's a requirement
that they lack the way to get into
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
developed by a major university
in the southeast, has full-timte em
ployees in the Pendleton Building
including a director and a secre
tary.
The professors are the ones
that are most excited about the
new project this summer, he said.
They will teach only two courses
during the summer, one for the
first three and one-half weeks and
one for the last three and one-half.
CORRECTION
Dr. Lawrence Flaum is assistant
to the president for special proj
ects. His title was incorrectly given
as "vice president for advanced
studies and research" in last Fri
day's issue of The Gamecock.
1411 GERVAIS ST.
THE NEW & DI1
Fiesta
Columbia's Larg
Fine Food...,
ALL YOU CAN EA
Tan3
oh
The older folks
It turns on a ne&
a natural Hawaiian tar
Becat
coconut
natural tanning rays. Me
A full Ii
LC
t,NlW '' RiE F LG (- TIO^N F0'
oij7 WriDCK! (4S-r~'1*
Ar, y6 it . ru. 66 ReOsW
Ov 1C.
Says Visiting
Americ
By KITTY McC.ASKI1,
Staff Writer
I,ittle rules like what time a girl
has to be in and how many cuts a
student can take are im1uch stricter
here than in England, according to
James Canipbell, visi'ing professor
from Oxford University.
Campbell has been teaching in
the history department this semies
t er.
"Outside Wales there are rarely
rules albut alcohol on campuses
in lBritain and there i-is only one
univesity in Wales with these
rules," Campbell said.
"There is a drug problem in
~43~j ~ TIME
SUN.-THUR.
11:30-1:45
FRIDAY
11:30-1:45-5:30-7:30
FFERENT.
Buffet
est Selection of
'a groi
'our b
have their own tanning proc
w breed of sun worshipers. T
i-deeper, faster. Only Tany
se Tanya has Hawaii's favori
oil and cocoa butter. So Tan
Ike today happen .. . your wa
ne of suntan products for toc
CA.LLUD U 6)N 1b VGAj W
LVNDON FUIJWS FAc, Yje(,V
is A tr idc6 cf A.W,,A K
IoN F 1911ER, 51NI.AM: OM
( ATD4 fAl oftCAqiVn41T1o*J Wtlfic
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wAs T$fs (.GMPQrF_
NU:.(T S(A66 is
1 4 0 hf
& oo
ao
x oq *O/KENTS LATM
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TTT' E y3c
'Ape
Professor
an Univ
some -:n-lh n tivleritie'-alnit
eXclu,ive.l cneYrned with mari
juana," lIe saidI. .\Ithlough it is
a (1a1uSe for a great dval of worrv.
it hasn't really become a mssajes
problem.
"In general if a university ha:
reason to think that soneone is a
danger to other people it will get
rid of him. Nonethelev.s, it isn't
always ea.y to decide what is the
he.st thing to do. There is the ole
problml that the more >trict the
authorities are, the more anxious
students are to ciover up for some
one."
Acconhntg to Campbeil vxce'pt at
three universit ies there have been
no Student rebellions which "would
speni at all s-erious in comparison
to what ha, happened in many
campus here."
'Campbell, who :a,ys he like's Ce
luumibia "quite a lot, " aid that the
education systeis of the two c oUl
tries are so different that it's hard
to compare them.
"I'm uised to a specializ4Nd degree
system with onese subhject. Thllere
are e both adlvanitages ande dlisadi
v'antatge's te yoeur system. T'h.'
chief adlvanstage is tha t stuent
)Ves
ody.
lucts. Tanya is new.
hates you. You want
a can give it to you.
te tanning%gents -
ya boosts the sun's~
* get with Tanya.
ay's sun children -
at your bookstore.
'CONUT OIL AND
COCOA BUTTER
-kr C& - - -
A0. cI A- CAN LA6
oo ky Epw W-K m 0*y. 1T
s 'S tLA. --
uff
h Ity?
twLCO
t i3 W
140MRA IANs.
N64JIFAC6 qoue AND:
R000 ,2 jC
(FOO m oa TO jyt6 1P
U(H 'X Wfir r~b~j IS
6(U 1 3 p4 -
Rlli
ersities
ha:1% a m ht tter p
t mill %i' t - (.I in which subj
thevy',re in toer' st I(i.
"St udnt ar much rill, var
he r. In 1-:11land one w ul-n't
so wide a rangv of g(o)<i an.
stud ents in onle clas," h l
tinIed.
.A nerican student> are mit
e well-prepafr-d in high och
than English -tudent-, he <aid.
w ult,d111 -a. tli er are a minliimumll
tw%*o yvars behin<i."
E-:nglish Students have usu
decided what field they want
enter befte they Start ollege,
Faculty Footnoft
OEO Gr
The <ffice. f F.-:C'.1miC <>Ipp
tunity has awaTrni a .t;n,soun gr:
t4- Il. Ft-lix Ia t r n e t
f4 -,os er ( f b i,l)y. , and I )r. .J,
search relatetd tnt paratism:
mial nutrlitionn in Stth 'aril ma.
I Jr. .Jrrhn It. 1''tlani of the hist,
diepartmlent is the cor-authoitr w
August FrallZell trf thne 1 *ni 'en
of Freibturg of a book. Ii istory
the Church, ju>t publ ished
Her-der and Hierdter of New Yo
The work was translatred fnt
fl\\. It lti nit HrC
\tilk. rIt 1 . I () IC l\
New 'Terra Cc
The Camus S
Ult - TOHG
-7 U5f N b
'IV6 bjvt )3u t-5i
T ~ - 001 00
;ot WTH ANrTHC WE t oF (A
TS 5OW(J) (-rf tu- T-or -
TO E 10tJ5, 14RO k- Tm TOC
Stricter
r- said'. "-ince I'niver-.ity course-.
;1t4 ar1wp(lahzed, it i, harder for
Ifple who jon't know what thev
,i want to do. (in the other hand
:'t -Anc high scho,,l, are so much
'ior, advanced than here, people
0n- have more data to help them
deci<e blefore they go to cklIlege."
ICh The gr1aduate system is alko very
-1 liff.r.it il l'ngland, according to
"I Camplbll. "()n the whole there is
f b-s- (urse work and more em
pha:i- (n the diertation. The
ly I \ .Phil.. the major research degree,
to iepends virtually entirely on the
h# issertation."
PS
mt Given
wr- (ernan by Peter Hecker. V'SC his
mit :ry\ inist ructor
hn I he r'.c tr of the .SC Insti
rI tue Af .\rlchaq."Igy and Anthro
TaII jIlg y. I ir. Isobe.rt L. St. phenison,
ha- pubb I-hid th ree articles con-'
.''il ex(cavatijfls done byV him
ry whdeb with thle Smnit hsonian Inst itu
ith tion.
ty rI weo the articles are hook r'e
of views of Excavations at Stillhouse
h.s hollow and Th'le Gil bert Site pub..
k I. lid ini the A Tmer ican Anthro
0n plo gi1st.
\\l lii i I ()Itle l(\ u(111/
bi opI It e niht, it c. omes'
pper' Face (G leamner
Revlon
on (In Russell House)\