The Daily Tar Heel
Tuesday, April 30, 1974
New UNC deadline June 1
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April 29-May
v
0
-
Gov. James Holshouser has been advised
by the office of Civil Rights that UNC must
plan immediate steps to increase enrollment
of blacks in its graduate and professional
schools this fall.
The increase in number of blacks in
graduate schools is only part of several
changes that the OCR division of the
Department of Health, Education and
Welfare suggested be made in the
University's desegregation plan. The
deadline for receiving the revised plan is
June I.
The letter that came to Gov. Holshouser
from OCR Director Peter Holmes followed
an April 15 meeting with University and
community officials. The meeting was
arranged to discuss the plan that the
University had submitted Feb. 6.
Changes the OCR suggested are, briefly:
Immediate steps to increase black
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enrollment for the fall in graduate and
professional schools and more black
graduates from those programs.
The need for committing funds to make
predominantly black institutions be at least
equal to their white counterparts, no later
than the 1976-77 school year.
That predominantly white UNC-G and
North Carolina A & T, a predominantly
No action
The Faculty Council adopted a resolution
Friday encouraging academic departments
to design more courses other than the
traditional three credit-hour class. But the
Council took no action on a recent set of
proposals to change the standard load from
five courses to four.
Under the resolution, introduced by
James R. Gaskin, Dean of Arts and
Six females and six males have been
appointed to the committee formed to
investigate the desirability of establishing an
inter-disciplinary curriculum in Women's
Studies.
The members of the committee are as
follows: Earl E. Baughman, psychology
department; Ann W. Burnham, music; Julia
G. Crane, anthropology; Peter G. Filene,
history; Dell B. Johannesen, economics;
Marty Turner Lane, education; Duncan
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black school, hold a conference to discuss
joint education projects.
The state plan should set a schedule to
break down the dual system of higher
education in the state.
The plan's acceptability will be heavily
dependent on the state's proposed rate of
implementation.
The state plan should make sure that
on 4-course load
Sciences, the various departments are
encouraged to plan courses which would be
worth between two and six credit-hours.
However, the resolution makes no reference
to course load.
Alan Stiven, a zoology professor and a
member of the administrative board of the
College of Arts and Sciences, said that there
was little discussion of the Schutz Report at
ep earned.
MacRae, Jr., political science; Catherine A.
Maley, romance languages; W. Robert
Mann, mathematics; Margaret A.
O'Connor, English; E. Maynard Adams,
philosophy; and Richard L. Simpson,
sociology.
Simpson was named chairman of the
committee because, according to Chancellor
N. Ferebee Taylor, he held the highest
rank department chairman and because
he was most qualified.
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white high school students are not counseled
away from predominantly black schools and
vice-versa.
John Sanders, vice president for planning
of the UNC system, said some of the HEW
OCR demands showed a "very limited
understanding of how a university operates."
He added. "We will send them something by
June I.".
the meeting. The Schut Report, completed
in 1972, recommends that the standard
undergraduate course load be changed from ,
the current set of five three-hour courses to
four four-hour courses.
However, the report also recommends
that each department continue to offer two
and three-hour courses when the class's
requirements make that set-up more
feasible.
Stiven said Arts and Sciences had
prev iously compiled a survey of department
chairmen concerning the change. "They were
almost unanimously opposed to the (Schutz)
recommendation."
He added that the general faculty view was
that a four course load would tend to move
the University towards a system of standard
courses and course loads. The Council, he
said, "wanted the flexibility they did not get
with the Schutz report."
Summer editor
named for paper
Elliott Warnock, a sophomorejournalism
major and a native of Chapel Hill, was
named summer editor of The Tar Heel
Thursday by the Publications Board.
Warnock is currently sports editor of The
Daily Tar Heel.
Warnock takes over his job after the exam
period, putting out the first issue on May 20.
In the past, the summer paper has come out
weekly during summer session; this year,
semi-weekly editions will be published.
b oa a e a o'o a a b b it 6 it "a o o o e a e'a'B
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