■L A THE LANCE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE STUDENT BODY OF ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE VOL. 8. No. 1. ST. ANDREWS. PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE. LAURINBURG, N. C. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968. S. A. GREETS NEW CLASS Student-Facuity Advisory Groups Highlight Freshmen Orientation BY PETE COOK Freshmen who appeared on the St. Andrews campus last Sunday had the privilege of being the first class to be initiated by acompletely new orientation program. Unlike previous orientation programs, which were primarily social acti vities, the new program boasts a much broader base. The emphasis was placed upon the entire four years of college life, and the academic portion of the total college ex perience was stressed. Stu- dent-facuity advisory com mittees were established to re place the old faculty advisory system, in an attempt to Intro duce each freshman to varying academic points of view, and also to establish stronger lines of communication between up perclassmen and freshmen and faculty and students. Rick Walker and Sandra Gaddis, orientation committee co-chairmen, laid out all the groundwork for the new stu dent- Initiated advisory pro gram, which was the greatest change over previous years. They supplemented the acade mic emphasis by including a New Residence Policies Improve Dormitory Life By SARA LEE Paralleling the creative de velopment on the academic side of the campus In student in dividual participation Is the dorm situation at St. Andrews, which Is moving toward greater student Involvement and re sponsibility. Granville, Orange, Kings Mountain and Winston-Salem are presently experimenting with new Ideas In Resident Directors, and all dorms are placing more emphasis on stu dent leadership within the dorm rather than the Resident Di rectors’ responsibilities. Granville Dormitory is under the directorship of Martha James, a 1968 graduate of St. Andrews and head of the Peace Corps program on campus, and is co-dlrected by Betts Hunter and Margaret Parrish who are seniors. They share the ultimate responsibility with the dorm council of enforcing col lege rules and policies in a positive way. Betts and Mar garet live in the dorm Itself and are especially Involved in main tenance problems, while Martha lives in the ResldentDirector’s apartment. The idea is still new and flexible, but they foresee a p r o d u c tive and responsible year for the girls of Granville. Orange Dormitory has Mrs. Lib Dove as part-time Resi dent Director with the dorm council taking a major respon- slbilllty in dorm management. Mrs. Dove is also part-time college hostess in the Student Center and says, “I live in Orange and I love it”. Albemarle Dormitory has a new Resident Director, Mrs. Eleane Edens. She spent ten weeks this summer working as coordinator of social affairs and Overman Rescheduled For Science Lectures One of the most significant contributors in the field of nuclear energy in recent years will kick off the 1968-69 Visit ing Scientists Lectures. Dr. Ralph T. Overman will join the St. Andrews scientists for two weeks, September 15-27, lec turing publicly and in class rooms. In his 21 years in the atomic energy field Overman has pre- 8 jaqumv 'O 'K ‘3jnqni-n»'®’I oiva aovxsoa s a sented more than 1,000 lectures and addresses on more than 200 college campuses. He has had wide experience in radio and in commercial and educational television as well as designing the Mobile Radioscope Labora tory which is being used In training courses at small col leges throughout the country. Nearly 6,000 scientists, en gineers, physicians and teach ers have been trained under his direction in his position as Chairman of the Special Train ing Division of the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies. Presently Dr. Overman is a Scientific and Educational Con sultant and the President of Overman Nculear. He received his A. B. and M. S. from Kan sas State College and took his Ph. D. from Louisiana State University. Eight other scientists and mathematicians will follow Overman during the academic year. Dr. Donald H. Andrews, Professor of Chemistry Emeri tus, Johns Hopkins University and Florida Atlantic University; Dr. Louis Bright, Associate Commissioner For Research, (Continued to page 3) activities and as dorm counselor for an Upward Bound Project at Fort Valley State College in Georgia. Her home away from campus is In Bennettsville, where for nine teen years she was a substitute rural mall carrier, one of the two women in South Carolina employed in this capacity. She has four children and has had much experience with college age people. She feel s St. Andrews offers her a “happy and rewarding experience”. Kings Mountain and Winston- Salem for the second year have “doTn daddies.” Dick Prust and Javld Mcllhlney, who work closely with their dorm presi dents and councils on matters such as damage control and dorm Improvement. Mrs. Dan Hasty is serving as ;emporary Resident Director in Mecklenburg Dorm. Mrs. Sarah Peterson is Resident Director In Concord and Mrs. W. M. Harvey Is In Wilmington. The new resident philosophy has done a great deal toward forwarding better relationships between administrators and students. The elected suite lea ders plus the dorm president and the Resident Director as advisor working together open vast possibilities toward a new direction in resident life. type of "socialcurriculum” in to the overall program. Films were shown on several con temporary social problems such as alcohol and sex, and|^ opportunities tor participation in group discussions were also made, available for every fresh man. “We have sort of felt like a drawstring as students unac quainted with the S. A. situation have pulled and tugged at us from all directions for infor mation,” said Rick Walker. “With registration over and classes ready to begin, there is still apprehension among many new students about what is to come, but we can’t continue orientation forever”. “But,” he continued, “I think order has begun to appear out of the chaos. Hopefully, the op portunities which the freshmen have had this week to talk with the upperclassmen and pro fessors they have met will help them to realize more quickly that they are now a part of St. Andrews.” Women’s Hours Receive Final Approval New women’s hours go into effect today, September 5,1968. The proposal for a change in the hours sytem received final ap proval by a special board con- sistilig ul PrediUlitit ^ bert Davidson, dean of the col lege, Rodger Decker, dean of students, Alan Atwell, director of admissions, Robert Daven port, college pastor, Bruce Frye, admissions director and Silas Vaughnbusiness manager. Sophomores, Juniors and seniors will follow the new hours as follows: 12 midnight weekdays, Friday until 1:00 a.m., Saturday until 2:00 a.m. and 12 midnight Sunday. Senior women and women stu dents over 21 years of age will “be under an extended hour situation when a practical method for residence hall sec urity can be Implemented,” the committee reported. Incoming freshman women’s hours are 12:00 p.m. through out the week. This includes Friday and Saturday nights. There will be no sign-out on campus activity. However, sign-out will be required for women who will be away from the campus after 8:00p.m.This Includes weekend trips and overnights. All other regulations con cerning hours are Identical to the 1967-68 student handbook. Dean of Students Rodger Decker commented that: “The extended hours for women stu dents at St. Andrews repre sents a contlnutlon of the shift of responsibility from college authority to the Individual stu dent. As a member of the total college community, each woman now has greater opportunity to (Continued to page 2) // if 'I \r.rn] V I ' Wilmington Dorm sponsored a free feed for the campus Tuesday night as part of the Orientation week. Josh White, Jr., Concert Set Folksinger Due Here September 13 FOLK SINGER JOSH WHITE, JR. National Recognition For Science Program BY MARGARET OFFTERDINGER Along with Harvard, MIT, Cal Tech, and Berkeley, St. Andrews has been cited for innovative work In science education in the 1968 June Issue of “Science and Technology.” The article, written by associate editor Mr Michael Wolff, noted that “should the ex periment (at St. Andrews) succeed, it will undoubtedly be a model for the many other schools that are presently watching it.” St. Andrews is the only small liberal arts college metloned among the five schools featured. Recognition of the science program Is also found in a six-page spread Including front cover of “College Management” (April 1968). This article stresses the moves to study interdisciplinary science as a counterpart to the St. Andrews humanities study. Dr. Tyler G.Mlller, assistant dean ana chemistry professor, is quoted as saying. “One of the main reasons we have been able to launch this massive reappraisal and re construction at St. Andrews is because the college is young. Faculty, students, and ad ministrators share the feeling that St. An drews is pioneering...We can beboldbecause there Is a beautiful lack of entrenched science faculty members.” The article in "College Management" em phasizes that the St. Andrews science pro gram not only places science on a par with the other discipllnarles, but also breaks down the barriers between the individual sciences themselves. ''Physics Today” (March 1968) also noted the quality of the St. Andrews science pro gram. In this article Dr. John M. Fowler, Director of the College Commission on Physics (CCP), stated, “The St. Andrews science curriculum development seems to be’ the most thorough test of the interdisciplinary approach In higher education and will be followed with interest.” Approximately $1,157,050 has been re ceived in the past two years to help send the St. Andrews science program from plan ning board to reality. First grants in 1966-67 totaled over $300,000. This includes grants from the Danforth Foundation ($75,000), and Health, Education and Welfare, Title III ($52,825), From the National Science Foundation, St. $130,000 under COSIP - College Science Improvement Program Grant - and under graduate equipment programs. St. Andrews was one of the first 15 colleges in the country to receive COSIP. rour grants were received in 1967-68 totaling $857,050. Under HEW, Title III Cooperative Program, in conjunction with Shaw University and Duke, St. Andrews re ceived $56,000. This money will be used to production of 8mm film loops on laboratory techniques, faculty salaries, and consultants from Duke. HEW also granted $741,250 for the science building. Josh White, Jr., known pri marily for his folk singing abilities, will be on stage September 13 at St. Andrews as the first Student Center Board attraction for 1968-69. The Friday concert will kick off the Fall’s entertainment, which could prove to be the best at St. Andrews In recent years. Concerts, dances, and many ex cellent movies are scheduled by the Student Center Board for the remainder of the Fall term. The versatile Mr. White, prior to his Laurlnburg ap pearance has entertained many an audience In both the United States and Europe. His singing abilities have brought him from the Village Gate and the Bitter End in New York, to The Troubadour in Los Angeles, The Bunkhouse in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and the world-famous Playboy Club In Chicago. Outside of the nightclub cir-i- cult. Josh, Jr., has made ap pearances at Carneige Hall and Town Hall In New York, Jordan Hall In Boston, and at more than three hundred colleges and un iversities across the nation. His American tours have been matched with extensive tours throughout Europe, most re cently in England and Scandi navia. Josh White, Jr.’s ability to entertain has not been limited to his musical work, however. He has appeared in five Broad way shows, most recently, “Only In America,” and “The Long Dream”. ENTERTAINMENT LISTINGS: SEE PAGE 6 i 1