LibnAkY
St Andfiws Cr*^i>
APR 29 1982
Vol. 20, No. .14' •
ST. ANDREWS PRESBVTERIAN COLLEGE
Friday, April 23, 1982
Stanley Accepts New Post
By TERRI DAVIS
As Jim Stanley opened a
brass paper holder in the
shape of a duck he listened to
Ann Collins, Associate Direc
tor of Admissions, and Patsy
Webb, Administrative Assis
tant of the Director of Ad
missions, tell how we would
miss him at St. Andrews.
Stanley expressed his ap
preciation to Ann and to Pat
sy for their “going away”
gifts and proceeded to ex
plain his reason for resigning
his four year position as
Director of Financial Aid at
St. Andrews,and of the mixed
emotions he feels about leav
ing the school.
Stanley leaves St. Andrews
to accept the position of
Director of Student Financial
Assistance for PhilUps Col
leges, Inc. which is a cor
poration consisting of 12
junior colleges. Phillips Col
leges has schools in Georgia,
Mississippi Kentucky, Loui
siana, Tennessee, Oklahoma,
and Colorado and plans to
add two more colleges to the
organization in the . near
future.
His new duties with
Phillips will involve setting
up all of the financial pro
grams, policies, and pro
cedures out of the main of
fice in Gulfport, Mississippi
He will be in charge of
dispersing all of the funds
and ot acquiring other
sources for the colleges from
the government. Stanley will
have a staff of about 55 peo
ple and will do a small
amount of traveling.
Stanley adds that his new
office is on the 14th floor of
a new high rise building and
his office view, which
overlooks the Gulf Coast, is
“extremely good.”
“I’m excited about the
new job,” says Stanley, “but
I’m very sad about leaving
St.Andrews.” Stanley has had
a few other job offers recent
ly but turned them down.
“This opportunity was just
too good to turn down,” he
says.
Stanley is quick to say that
he “leaves the school with
only good things to say about
it - especially about the
students. I’ve spent the best
years of my career at St. An
drews and feel I’m a better
person for having worked
with the faculty, administra
tion and students here. I’ve
made some lasting relation
ships at St. Andrews that I
will always treasure and this
Continued on page 2
SA Students Assaulted
Jim Stanley leaves his four year position as Director
of Financial Aid for a higher position at Phillips Col
leges Inc. “I’m excited about the new job,” says
Stanley, “but I’m ever sad about leaving St. Andrews.”
By SHARON STANLEY
For most students. Good
Friday is a day of relaxation,
fellowship, and preparation
for the Holidays. But for
junior Judy Diogo and
freshman Kelly Lemaster, it
was a day ended in fear, in
security, and intimidation—
because in Albemarle dorm,
both were victims of attemp
ted assault.
As Judy napped in the
room of a friend after return
ing from a party on Main
Street, an uninvited visitor
strolled through Albemarle
dorm. The time was approx
imately 2:45 a.m. Judy had
entered the room about fif
teen minutes earlier and,
feeling sick, had fallen asleep
after watching television. She
was resting on the bed,
covered by a blanket. The
light was off. The door was
closed.
“The next thing I knew,
somebody was lying on the
bed,” says Judy. “I moved
away. He reached out and
tried to put his arm around
me. . .He said ‘It’s just me
baby. I’m not gonna hurt
you.’ I started punching and
kicking and screaming. He
up off the bed and blocked
my way so I couldn’t get
away. He went to the door. .
.and, in no hurry, he walked
out.”
Judy then ran down the
hall to the room of Bob Har
wood. Bob went to the dorm
lounge to tell Judy’s friends
Richard Boisseau, Bob
McGee, Chris Matthews,
and Mitch Merritt what had
happened. The men im
mediately spread out to other
dorms and outside to search
for the culprit.
While they searched, the
man continued his roam
through Albemarle. Next
stop; Suite 4. As student
Beth Swindell walked out of
her room door, she spotted a
man in the hall. “Excuse
me”, he said, “I’m looking
for Winston-Salem.” Beth
told him directions, and then
he asked to use the
bathroom. She showeH him
to the restroom, went back to
her room and locked her
door, “I heard him walking
down the hall,” she says.
“I’m not sure but 1 think he
was the man who went to
Kelly’s room.”
Kelly LeMaster had just
said goodnight to her
boyfriend. She had returned
to her room, and had fallen
asleep. The time was about
3:15 a.m.
Kelly says, “I woke up and
I was in his arms, and he was
kissing me in the face. I turn
ed sideways to get away. He
grabbed the zipper on my
nightgown. The smell of beer
On the evening of Good Friday a man who fits this
description was reported for attempting to assault two
St. Andrews females in Albemarle dorm. If you have
any information on this man, please call Security at
276-8767.
Global Glance
Secretary of State Alexander Haig spent time in Buenos
By COREY INGOLD' i” continued attempts by the U.S. to solve the
British-Argentinian problem in a diplomatic manner. However,
Argentine Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez said that
the only good thing about the situation is “the fact that
negotiations continue.”
Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini disclosed that there is a growing
lack of unity within the Iranian military He urged that all
soldiers of dissident nature be removed from their duties.
Many experts feel that part of the reason for the lack of unity'
is due to attempts by the leftict Mujahedeen faction to subvert
the ruling class of Iran.