irkinj denct I roojj'i arojl re no| t the, EactJ ehall uedi "ait I The Caroleva Joernal SlvdM* Ot. Tfc« Umirtnhf 04 M»rti Cmtmliitm At Ckmt denci! onmi I Ivvlio' er.lj! wthe; apsii Legislature Acts On Billups Memorandum On Monday, November 4, 1968 at 7:30 P.M. the Student Legislature was called to order by Stewart Auten. Vice President of SGA. The Freshmen Class Officers and Freshmen Representatives were sworn in. They are Gary Williams, Lynne Allen, Nancy Allen, and Nancy Brady. Gus Psomadakis was sworn in for his third term as a Night Representative. After the roll was called and a quorum was determined present, Mr. Bill Billups presented his President’s Report in which he commended the Freshmen for their work on the United Appeal Drive. Fie then called upon Elections Committee Chairman. Jerrold Burks, to announce the results of the last elections (which were reported in last week CAROLINA JOURNAL). During the reports of the committees, Homer Gaddis, Chairman of Ways and Means, announced that there will be an open meeting of the committee on Wednesday, November 13, at 12:00 in C 103. Under the Rules Committee Report, Parry Bliss moved that the new Publicity Rules and Regulations be accepted. This motion was passed. Gus Psomadakis, chairman of the Judicial Committee, reported that 16 campus organizations have still not renewed their charters. These organizations will be contacted by members of the committee and informed of the November 19 deadline for returning their forms. He then made a motion that the charter of the Collegiate Civitan be approved and that the charters of the Pep Club, Rotoract, and Engineers Club be renewed. The motion passed. Under Old Business, Jerrold University Hires k4 Urban Sociologist Blythe Finishes New Novel Dr. Janies Green to Head Sociology Department Burks, chairman ot the committee which was formed to study the memorandum sent by Mr. Billups to Miss Cone concerning allocation of student funds, made the committees report. The committee report was six pronged: I) That the allocation of Student Activity Fees should remain in the hands of the Legislature rather than in an independent organization operating outside of the Student Legislature. 2. ) That a University Budget Control Committee be established to work directly with the general fee and make recommendations directly to the board of Trustees. 3. ) That the following sub-committees be established under the University Budget Control Committee: A. ) Registration Fee Committee B. ) Building Fee Committee C. ) General Fee Committee D. ) Union Operational Fee Committee E. ) Athletics Fee Committee F. ) Intramural Fee Committee G. ) Medical Fee Committee 4. ) That the above mentioned committees be made up of students approved by the Student Legislature to work with the administrative officials presently concerned with these areas. 5. ) That the students on these committees report back to the Legislature on the dispersal of these funds. 6. ) That the Legislature see to it that these figures be published in the campus newspaper. Mr. Burks then moved that this motion be tabled until the next meeting so that all members would have time to fully (Continued on Page 4) LeGette Blythe’s newest novel, titled BROTHERS OF VENGEANCE, will be published in April by William Morrow and Company as one of that house’s 1969 fiction leaders. The final pages of the manuscript have gone to the publisher and preliminary publication plans are under way BROTHERS OF VENGEANCE, the sixth in a series of Biblical novels by the North Carolina author that began with his BOLD GALILEAN, first published by the University of North Carolina Press in 1948, is the longest of the six. It runs to about 185,000 words. Legette Blythe The story, like all the other Blythe Biblicals, is set in the Rome-Palestine region in the first century. The new novel has a wealth of characters, both historical and fictional, including the Emperors Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, their wives, children, court favorites and enemies, along with the leading Jewish figures of that era, Jesus, the Apostle Paul, the several Herods and their wives, the High Priest Caiaphas, supporting the principal historical characters of the story, who are the slave Onesimus and the robber-revoluntionary Bar Abbas. The time of the novel is the middle third of the first century, beginning in the Roman year (Continued on Page 4) Friday the University announced the hiring of a new chairman of the Department of Sociology. Dr. James Wyche Green, the chief urban development advisor to the government of Panama, will assume the office and duties of professor and chairman of sociology next September, according to Chancellor D. W. Colvard. “The appointment, approved by the University of North Carolina Trustees in their meeting last Friday, represents the filling of another key academic position. We believe that Dr. Green is particularly fitted for involvement in the University’s urban affairs program because of his involvement in the social and economic problems of both underdeveloped and dense population centers of the world,’’ said Colvard. Dr. Green, a native of Alton, Virginia, graduated from Virginia Polytechnic Institute with honors and a Bachelor of Physical and Biological Sciences degree in 1938. He received his Masters in Economics and Sociology from V.P.I. a year later after working as a research fellow there in agricultural economics. For the next three years. Dr. Green served as an assistant specialist in land use planning at North Carolina State College Agricultural Extension Service, where he distinguished himself by his efforts to stimulate the communities of North Carolina to initiate local action for the development of their material and human resources through aided self-help. In March of 1942 Dr. Green joined the United States Army in which he served as an infantry company commander before being transferred to the Military Government and Civil Affairs Department. Dr. Green was also a student officer at the University of Wisconsin, studying Civil Affairs and Military Government. Dr. Green, who retired from the Active Reserve in 1965 with the rank of Lt. Colonel, compiled a distinguished service record and received the Bronze Star with Oak Leaf Clusters, both the French and Belgian Croix De Guerre, and five battle stars from the European Theatre. Upon discharge from the Army, Dr. Green spent a year and a halt in industry and as a high school teacher of agriculture in Virginia. In 1947 he returned to North Carolina, this time to Duke University as a student of religion. From 1948 to 1954 Green taught sociology at N. C. State College while working on his doctorate in Sociological Theory and Method and the Sociology of Complex Social organization at U.N.C.-Chapel Hill. He received his doctorate in 1953. Dr. Green went to work for the Agency for International Development (A.I.D.), U.S. Department of State as an advisor to Pakistan and conductor of a center to further Pakistan’s national program of integrated development at the village level. He served in this capacity until 1959, when he was employed by Cornell University as a professor in the Graduate School teaching and writing within the Department of Rural Sociology. Dr. Green also did graduate work at Johns Hopkins University in International Studies in 1959. From June of 1960 to June of ‘64 Dr. Green served in Southern Rhodesia as an advisor in community affairs and as the Senior AID Community Development Staff Advisor for the Central African Federation. Wliile in Rhodesia, Dr. Green was afforded the opportunity to study administration, village life, education, local government, health, apicultural extension, youth affairs, and the manner in which all these interrelate. Green has since served in the Dominican Republic and Peru, where he negotiated an $18 million loan for the Peruvian national program of community development. Since February of 1967, Dr. Green has worked as the chief of the Community Development Division of USAID/Panama and Chief Urban Community Development Advisor to the Government of Panama. Dr. Green, a member of Phi Kappan Phi National Honorary Scholarly Society and Alpha Zeta. has been selected to Who’s Who in American since 1962 and is an active member of Omicron Delta Kappa National Honorary Leadership Society. A frequent contributor to scholarly Journals over the years. Dr. Green is married and has two children. Journal Interview With Howard Winniman Jour: Hi, Mr. Winniman, I’m a representative of the JOURNAL, let’s do an interview. O.K.? May I sit down? Thank you! I Mr. W.: No, you may not sit down, but since you are doing I that anyway, go ahead. Jour: Wliere ya from, Mr. winniman? Mr. W.: You mean before coming here? 1 was doing Grad [ work at Miami Fla. Plus working the position of Assistant Director that 1 was not receiving W for. 1 did my graduate work in personal services. Jour: How old are ya Mr Winniman? Mr. W. I’m a quarter of a century plus three. Jour: Are you a single bachelor? Mr. W. Yes. Jour: Why? Mr. W. I want to be in positiion to give a wife all that 1 think she should have before I get married. I don’t want a working wife. Jour: Why did you pick this school to work at? Mr. W. Well, of all the schools 1 interviewed, this one presented the most challenge because it’s new, young, and has an interesting group of students. Jour: Do you still think that? Mr. W. Yeah, with the students. They are dynamic in their own way. Not like the northern kids. These are more the southern gentlemen and southern ladies and not so gentle men and ladies. There is a spirit in the leaders here which is rare indeed in a big university. Jour: Do you think this is a big university? Mr. W. No, but, there is a closeness here that is not at universities. These students are more sincere about the university as an entity. Jour: E)o you believe that the title of “apathy” fits the student body? Mr. W. No. I can’t buy apathy about these students. That’s an easy way out for the fellow students, faculty, and administration. The fact that they are here for an education shows that they are not apathetic. There is no such thing as an apathetic student. This is a commuter college. The Unionshould plan its activities around the student’s time. Some of these people have to drive an hour to get here. And they are not going to do that for just anything. We must gear for the married students, for the faculty. We have to plan for more than one group at a time. (Continued on Page 3)