THE LANCE St. Andrews Presbyterian College Marks Receives Award Volume 19 Number 2 Quiet Hours Imposed The Student Life Office plans to ' implement revised guidelines for dormitories this semester with the goal of improving the overall quality of student life in the residence hall Major goals of the program are reduction of excessive noise during week nights in all dorms, a renewed emphasis on academics, reduction of drug and alcohol abuse, revitalization of the St. Andrews Honor Code, more open lines of communication between the administration and the student body and increased student par ticipation and Residence Hall Council involvement in dealing with dorm problems. The guidelines were developed from a study made last spring by the Task Force on Student Life. The Task Force was set up in the wake of the freshman dorm controversy to examine the residence hall situation and suggest solutions to complaints about noise, vandalism and other problems. Student committees, to be appointed in the next few weeks, will report to the Student Life Committee near the end of the year on the progress of the guidelines towards improving the dorm situation. If the policy is not working, the administration has said freshmen dorms will be set up in the Fall of 1981. Under the new policy excessive noise will not be allowed after 8:30 p.m. in the residence halls and weekend paties must end at 3:00 a.m. Changes or ex ceptions to these hours require the unanimous consent of all the members of any given suite and Resident Director approval. LAURINBURG-^tuart A. Marks, local educator, author, researcher and professor of anthropology and en vironmental studies at St. Andrews Presbyterian College, has received a fellowship from the Guggenheim Foundation. According to the Guggenheim Foundation, these awards are designed “to recognize and to support specific and innovative projects that promise to achieve breakthroughs in our un derstanding of human social life.” Each year the Foundation sponsors competition nationwide for research fellowships in each major academic discipline. Dr. Marks is the first St. Andrews professor to receive such national recognition. According to Marks, the awards will be used to conclude his studies on hunting traditions in Scotland County. This research provides a social history of the county as reflected in land use and hunting patterns. This research has already received recognition through its support from the Wenner- Gren Foundation for Anthroplogical Research and a grant for Independent Research from the National En dowment for the Humanities. Stuart Mark’s interest in hunting and wild animals has a long history beginning with his youth in eastern North Carolina. Hunting was a sport enjoyed by his father. This interest continued when his family moved to the Belgian Congo as medical missionaries in the 1940’s and 1950’s. After spending much of his youth in Central Africa, Marks returned to Africa in the late 1960’s to pursue advanced studies on man’s relation ship with his environment. These studies resulted in his Ph.D. disser tation from Michigan State University and in the publication of his first book “Large Mammals And A Brave People:” subsistence hunters in Zambia, published by the University of Washington Press. This book has received acclaim by both biological and social scientists, as well as con servationists, as a penetrating analysis of the environmental relationships of a Third World culture and is based on field work. Marks is currently completing his third book on Africa for Burgess Publishing Company called “The Imperial Lion: Human Dimensions of Wildlife Management in Central Africa”. In addition, he has puslibhed over 20 articles and reviews in scholarly journals. Currently, Marks serves as a con sultant to the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, and for the 1981 Sym posium on Biology and Culture at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Marks is a resident of Laurinburg for the past ten years. Martha, his wife, teaches at Shaw Middle School and was the recipient of the Terry Sanford Award for Creative Teaching in 1979. They have two sons, Stephan and Jon, both students at Johnson Middle School. To motivate the Residence Hall Councils to enforce college policy, a clause has been adopted that requires councils to deal with rule infractions within 10 days after they occur. If the council doesn’t take action, the matter goes to the Student Life Office. Student life officials want to avoid interference with matters that should be handled by the councils. A more comprehensive inventory system for dorm furniture and suite facilities has been implemented to reduce vandalism, and information programs to help cut down on drug and alcohol abuse are planned. The honor code will receive attention in SAS 101 and through various “consciousness raising” activities including dialogues from key students and faculty members and group discussions. “The policy provides an opportunity for students and the administration to work together to deal with problems in the dorms” said Jerry Surface, assistant Dean of Students. Both Surface and Dean of Students Robert Claytor stressed that the Student Life Office wants to avoid an authoritarian approach to dealing with lifestyle questions. They hope these guidelines will aid in developing spirit of cooperation between students and the administration when considering changes in Residence Hall life. Handmi Kimura Ezra Poand See story on page 3 “When someone asks me what I major in, and I tell them English, they laugh! Why is that?” Why is it? It is because the bright eyed five foot-one girl who asks the question is Hiromi Kimura, the Japanese exchange student at St. Andrews. This is lUromi’s second trip to the States, and she will stay at St. Andrews for the entire school year. She hopes to study literature and drama. She is especially interested in public speaking as she hopes to get a job in her home town of Kyoto teaching English or serving as a tour guide at the local shrines and temles. Since Hironi has sepnt three years attending a Japanese college of eight thousand students, she hopes to benefit from the small class size. “All my classes where lectures with fifty to sixty students. I hated it.” Hiromi notes that the students in American colleges seem to be much more competitive. In Japan the part of college is getting admitted, so once in school the Japanese students are more relaxed. Hiromi talks about the differences between America and Japan with obvious interest. Baseball and frisbee games are familiar in Japan. For Hiromi, football is interesting, not be cause of the game, but because of the fevor of the fans. Like many other young Japanese, Hiromi enjoys “The Beatles” and “Simon and Garfunkle.” But her favorite singer, Shaun Cassidy, is virtually unknown in Japan. What has struck her as most odd about America? The wide variety of skin and hair colors, and the ability of Americans to laugh and talk so directly. “In Japan we always cover our mouths when we laugh.” She smiles self-consciously and says’ “I am afraid I will be too loud when I get back to Japan.”