THE GUILFORDIAN Greensboro, NC Task force report released ♦The Academic Structure Task force recommendations cause conflict across the campus BY ELLEN YUTZY Staff Writer Students may be mostly un aware of the unrest, but waves caused by the Academic Structure Task Force draft report are sweep ing across campus. The report, is sued on Nov. 25, 1997 for faculty feedback, concerns many members of the Guilford community. Essentially, the report func tions not as a specific proposal for action, but a compilation of the analysis that the Academic Struc ture Task Force did over the semes ter. They make several recommen dations for downsizing the size of the faculty at Guilford, relying pri marily in the short term on attri tion. The long-term suggestions are causing most of the controversy. In a list entitled "Departments Sug gested for Possible Review for Merg ers, Reduction to 'Service" Status, or Termination... [list two]" the task force included 11 different depart ments (see pg. 3). The task force invited faculty MSDE A SUMMARY OF THE ACADEMIC RESTRUCTURING TASK FORCE'S REPORT NEWS PG. 3 CLASH OF THE TITANS: A LOOK AT THE PAIN AND THE GLORY OF SCRABBLE FEATURES PG. 6 CONFESSIONS OF A COKE ADDICT FORUM PG. 14 GLOBAL WARMING SUMMIT HELD WORLD AND NATION PG. 11 KETCHUM WINS AWARD SPORTS PG. 15 You can get more of Gihat you oiant faith a kind aiord and a gun than faith just a kind faord —f)f Capone responses, which will be included in their final report. Many departments filed re sponses to the report. The ques tions raised mostly center on the process used by the task force to judge the viability of certain de partments. The task force lists eight criteria (see sidebar) used in their process, and writes that they are not weighted in any formulaic way. In the explanations for including departments on list two, the task force addresses primarily the first criterion, quantitative data. Geol ogy professor Charles Almy said, "They gave a list of eight criteria, but they only considered the first." So many people had similar questions that the task force added the following passage to the final report issued on Monday, Dec. 8. "Our discussions drew on various of the criteria, but we found that we had more clear-cut data on some criteria than on others, and that we were able to reach agreement more easily about some criteria than oth ers." The report explains, "As a re- Security director arrives ♦Sylvia Chillcott takes charge of the Guilford Security and Safety Office BY JESSE LAPLANTE Staff Writer Security. The very word sends chills down many a student's spine and leaves negative images of Ge stapo thugs dancing in their heads. Like it or not, however, the Se curity and Safety Office is an impor tant part of the Guilford community. By protecting students and making sure the rules and regulations of the college are observed, Security and Safety plays not only a protective role but an educational one as well. Just ask new security director Sylvia Chillcott. As of Dec. 1, Chillcott has been on campus, getting to know the ad ministration and the students. Al though she has not met everyone yet, it is her goal to be familiar with the Guilford community by next semes ter. Chillcott brings over ten years Since 1914, but never quite like this suit, when it came to pro viding justification for our recommendations, the task force was more likely to agree on harder data...than on more quali tative evaluations." Richie Zweigenhaft, chair of the task force, said, "We did draw on all of them, at times...as we looked at the more quali tative data, we found it was hard to get a handle on those." There is disagree ment, though, even about the hard data. The The atre Studies Department, included on list two, feel that the data is flawed in general. They filed their own analysis to correct what they saw as misrep resentation of the depart ment in the data used for the report. For example, by averaging practicum courses into the student-faculty ratio for theatre classes, the student-faculty of experience in public safety service to Guilford and hopes that she can apply that knowledge here. Previ ously she was the Director of Public Safety at Ringling School of Art and Design in Sarasota Florida, which, she is quick to point out, is not the clown college. After working three and a half years at Ringling, Chillcott says she is happy to be returning to North Carolina, which is her home. Before working in Florida she worked at Catawba College in Salisbury, North Carolina, which is also where she grew up. She also graduated from Catawba with a Bachelor of Arts de gree in sociology with a minor in his tory. Her first impression of Guilford when she came in late September for her interview, a two-day process, was that of the "traditional college cam pus atmosphere." "It was like being back in that 1 3? H Hp fIW i*Sl ■ r * 1 I li £* '4bllf tllP J njl |u Carolyn Beard Whitlow is one of the members of the task force. ratio used by the task force was much lower than the size of aver- PLEASE SEE REPORT ON PG. 3 liberal arts school atmosphere I was accustomed to at Catawba," says Chillcott, who also credits Guilford's history and architecture as factors that drew her in. When asked how she feels she can apply her previous knowledge to the Guilford community, a smile creased Chillcott's face. "I consider myself a professional student. I learn something new everyday," she re plied. "My whole objective is to over see the well-being of the student body," without whom Chillcott says she would not have a job. Chillcott wants to know the stu dents, and wants to be able to learn from them. She would like for every student to feel comfortable in talk ing to her about security-related problems, or anything else they have to say. "The security department is just as much a part of the educational process as other programs," she says, PLEASE SEE SECURITY ON PG. 2 December 12, 1997