I By Gmm Witm ?
4 Director at irmtMc
PSU Sociology Department Chairmm Becomes Editor
of Crimiral Justice Journal
IV. Frank SchmaUeger, who has been a member of the PSl I fatuity since 1975 and chairman
of the Department of Sociology and Social Wort, since 19. 1, is now the editor of a professional
journal about criminal justice whose material is being made available internationally.
Entitled "The Justice IVofessional," the journal is printed hy Wyndham Hall Press of
Bristol, Ind. Two thousand copies of this issue were published with the purchasing price being
16.96 for an individual issue or $12 annually for two issues. It is a semi- annual publication.
? Members of the advisory board are from four states: North Carolina, New Yortc, Missouri
. and Minnesota.
" Our authors in this issue are experienced professionals in their own right and bring to the .
. journal both personal and geographic diversity," says SchmaUeger. "Among them are two I
police officers, seven professors, an attorney, and a graduate student They hail from six I
. different states: Alaska, Florida, Colorado, Illinois, Texas and Pennsylvania."
SchmaUeger says such a journal is needed "because to be scholarly, one needs to publish V
and write. If not we can't test our ideas out there in the real world. We can't stay current with
. aU the innovations today."
? This journal is the outgrowth of a more modest publication which began a year ago with the
assistance of a PSIJ faculty development grant of $700. "This new journal is no longer
supportea oy grant money from PSU," said SchmaUeger.
."In this issue," continued SchmaUeger, "you will read about how law enforcement agencies
perceive the significance of a college degree; you wfll learn that the search for truth in the
classroom can often become a frustrating endeavor when social scientists become expert
witnesses within an adverserial system of justice; and you will receive personal glimpses into
the liyes of public defenders faced with an often thankless task."
Articles that appear in the journal are selected by an elimination process with peers in the
criminal justice field judging them and choosing the best Short summaries of each article
appearing are made available to the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (part of the
Department of Justice in Washington, D.C.) at the service's request Summaries are also sent
to the National Institute of Corrections, based at Denver, Colo., and put on the Lockeed Data
Base, a major computer service.
"Articles are also made available internationally on microfilm," said SchmaUeger, obviously
proud of/his innovative journal.
WPSU-TVPrograms on Charlotte, Rockingham Stations
Beginnign Jan. 1, programs produced by WPSU-TV will be made available on cable TV
systems in Charlotte and Rockingham, says Dr. Otcar Patterson, PSU director of
telecommunications.
The programs in the Charlotte area will be carried at 3 p.m. on the second Tuesday and
second Thursday of each month over Channel 30.
The programs on Rockingham cablevision will be carried at 4 p.m. on the first and third
Fridays of each month over Channel 24.
This means a huge market for the programs which are now carried over cablevision stations
in Pembroke, Lumberton and Fayetteville.
Anne Russell Co-Authors History of Religions
Dr. Anne Russell, who is in her second year of teaching in the Communicative Arts
Department at PSu. is the ?wauthor of a pictorial book entitled: North Carolina PORTRAITS
OF FAITH: A Pictorial History of Religions.
Dr. Russell, a native of Wilmington, has been a feature writer for the Winston-Salem
Journal and UNC-Chapel Hill News Bureau, a reporter and entertainment editor for the
Raleigh News and Observer, and press clerk of the N.C. Legislature. Her background includes
two one-hour documentaries, a plav. and a previous pictorial history of Wilmington. Her great
grandfather was an tyiMijuil cl< toyman in Wihr irton. ;? ?...
(Jo-author with her was Mariane Megivejn, a Wilmington journalist and aits admin istt i->
The pictures were by Kevin C&ughkn, a Wilmington-based photographer designer.
The 244-pagr book coats $25. It was printed by Ibe Donning Company of Norfolk. Va.
Students m Teachei Training tr mating
Reports are that students are crowding into teacher- trai. 'ng programs iti the UNC System,
and this is certainly true at PSU.
According to Dr. Wright KilRan, PSU assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, there
has been an lg.3 percent increase in students entering teacher training at PSU over a year a,go.' {
I:i the >au oi bo, 382 were involved in this program. This fall the number jumped to 452. |
the number of student teachers going out this spring will also be up sharply, says I )r. (
Dan Little, PSU director of student teaching. Student teachers will increase from 42 last year to |
64 this spring-a cbmb of S2.4 percent. \ \
Students are being attracted into teaching by "higher salaries, job openings and promises of 1
impro"cd working conditions," says reports. 1
Richard Vela Earn* Doctorate
Richard Vela, director of advisement and retention at PSU who teaches in the
Communicative Arts Department, has earned his Ri.D. in English at UNC Chapel Hill.
Vela, a native of Del Rio. TVx., received both is B.A. and M.A. in English at the University
of Dallas. He joined the PSU faculty in 1971.
MM . ... I
SilSSffl
LUMbhXBANK DECLARES
YEAR END DIVIDEND
Tbe Lumbee Bank Board
of E)irectors recently declared
a year end dividend of $.50
per share. Ibis was a semi
annual dividend and made a
total of $1.00 per share in
dividends for the year of 1986.
At the end of the third
quarter the Lumbee Bank's
total earnings per share was
$2.90. These earnings reflect
Lumbee Bank's strong growth
patterns.
NEVILLE NAMED TO ALL
CITY FOOTBALL TEAM
Craig Neville, son of Dr.
and Mrs. Ralph Neville of
Lumberton, has been named
to the 1986 All Indianapolis
All City 5-A football team.
Neville, a 6' 2" 210 pound
senior played offensive guard
and defensive end for Indian
apolis Arsenal Technical High
School. He intercepted a pass
and ran it back 40 yards for
the Tech Titans before losing
to Indianapolis Howe High
School 27-20 in the opening
round of the state playoffs.
-??*.- /f> - A A
Dr. Fbnk Schmalleger... Edi
tor of new journal on criminal
justice ??*??? material is
being made available inter
>?nationally.
Reason's (Dreettnot^
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