cfai u thursday, november 13, 1975 volume 99 number 46 lincoln, nebraska L Social Work School to move V. UN By Barbara Lutz The UNL School of Social Work will be moving to Omaha as a result of accredita tion hearings in New York City Wednesday. The Council on Social Work Education, a national organization in charge of ac crediting schools, renewed the University of Nebraska at Omaha's (UNO) accredita tion until November, 1977, announced Ronald Ozaki, director of the UNL school. . That November, the UNO school will be subject to another accreditation review, Ozaki said. The council has outlined several "new expectations," but they will not be entirely known until Friday, he said. Closed hearings The council heard the defense of the NU schools in closed hearings Tuesday and Wednesday. Their decision will be made official Friday. Ozaki said the hearing required consoli dation of the resources of the two campuses. Combining the two schools will "cut down the number of students we admit," Ozaki said. He said the phasing out of the UNL School will end the graduate program at UNL this academic year and the under graduate program the following year. "We will end up with 90 to 100 gradu ate students, as opposed to 117 now and 70 to .80 undergraduates instead of 500 now enrolled," Ozaki said. Current budget These are only working figures, he said. "We have to think in terms of' the faculty student ratio." The plan is to continue with the current budget which was ap proved by the Legislature, with hopes of adding one more faculty member, he said. Five hundred students currently are en rolled in the NU school, with about half of them attending classes on the UNL campus, according to the UNL social work office. Ozaki said the next steps will be com munication between the UNLUNO admin istrations to formulate plans for the move. . The NU school's national accreditation was threatened by ' the council's criticism in five areas. V These were: -Overall lack of support of the school by the university. Lack of adequate faculty resources. -Lack of sufficient cohesiveness among the faculty. -Lack of congruity between the missions of the Lincoln and Omaha camp uses and the apparent inability of the school to respond to both. -Lack of continuity in the school's leadership because of "recent faculty turn over." There are now 18 faculty members. The most recent resignation was that of the school's director, Ted Ernst, who left to head the. University of Kansas School of Social Work. Resource consolidation John Sarr, assistant to the provost for program review at UNO, has said the move will strengthen the program. The chief advantage, he said, will be consolidation of the school's resources. Sarr has said there are "resources available to operate on only one campus." "We do intend to provide a program that will meet the needs of both urban and rural practitioners," Sarr said. Locating the entire program on one campus will eliminate duplication, he said. Two courses now in the school's curricu lum, Social Work 100 (social welfare as an institution) and Social Work 200 (social work as a profession), will remain on the UNL campus, but will not count toward a major or an Arts and Sciences group re quirement, according to Max Larsen, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, He said the two courses can only be used as electives. - Attending the hearings were Ozaki, NU Vice-President Steven Sample, UNO College of Public Affairs and Community Service Dean Hubert Locke, UNO Provost Herbert Garfinkel, UNO Chancellor Ronald Roskens, UNO Graduate College Dean Robert Woody, student representative Re becca Burro, Craig Collins, who represented a coalition of concerned persons and a representative of Fund of the Midlands from Omaha. Vice chancellor candidates PfhSto by Stv Etoror Ronald Ozaki, director of UNL School of Social Work Two receiving attention By Randy Blauvelt Two of "four to six" names submitted to UNL Acting Chancellor Adam Brecken ridgc as possible candidates for the position of vice chancellor for the Institute of Agri culture and Natural Resources reportedly are receiving top consideration. The Lincoln Evening Journal Wednes day reported that Martin A. Massengale of the University of Arizona at Tucson, and Walter Woods, a former UNL faculty mem ber now at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., are the top candidates for the spot. The story quoted one source as ItLfil lLfl .Ljr ' . n U.S. Treasury plans $2 bill rerun By Ann Owens 'That's as phony as a $2 bill!" The saying is now obsoleta-at least for awhile. On April 13, 1976, Thomas Jeffer son's birthday, the government will issue a new $2 bill displaying Jefferson's portrait as a permanent addition to the U.S. currency, - But a past attempt to do this was unsuccessful. The $2 bill was issued until 1966, when it was removed from circulation. Accord ing to Steven Sarle, U.S. Treasury Dept. director of public affairs, so few $2 bills were printed then that people either kept them in safety deposit boxes for novelty items or considered them bad luck. This time the government hopes to print 400 million $2 bills annually. And if the public mn them, the government will save $4 million a yetf in printing costs. FewerllfcSli Stria said the government hopes to . eventually print 50 per cent less $1 bills. He added that a need exists fcr s denomin ation between fee $1 bill sad th $5 bill and that if consumers use the $2 bill, they will have to carry less currency. However, Sarle said that problems might arise finding space for $2 bills in some cash registers. Cash register manufacturers and retail and banking associations will meet soon to discuss possible cash drawer ad justments, he said. Either new cash regis ters will be made or additions will be put on old registers. According to National Cash Register representative Bill Sheahan, all modern ctish register have spaces for extra bills, charge account receipts and coins. Nebraska Union ' , The Nebraska Union cashier department will use $2 bills only if the public demands them, according to Daryl Swanson, assistant director of the Nebraska Union. Swanson said that in the past the Union has been a distribution'center for new cur rency. Silver dollars have been put back into circulation unsuccessfully, he said. "The bmk tries to impose them on us but we won't take them, because custo mers won't take them," Swanson contin ued. "The same thing will happen to the $2 , bill unless the public accepts it." Swanson added that the Union already . handles more currency denominations than it wants to. "Before Nebraska had state sales tax we rounded off prices to the nearest nickel," he said. "Now we have to waste time hand ling pennies and the customer has to waste time standing in longer lines." The key point continues to be public acceptance, Swanson said, and the federal government cannot impose the $2 bill on the public unless the public approves. According to Sam Whitworth, First National Bank of Lincoln cash manage ment officer, nobody wanted $2 bills when they were in circulation earlier and the same thing will probably happen this time. -;.., "Sounds besutifd" 'The $2 bill sounds beautiful on paper," Whitworth said, "but it all boils down to this will you want to cany it in your purse?" ' According to Sarle and a Lincoln Can teen Vending Company representative, no adaptation will be made in vending or dollar bill change machines. 'The $1 bill will continue to be a prominent denomination," Sarle said. "The vending machine and change machine com panies probably wouldn't benefit from sdspting to the $2 bill." saying Massengale was being given prime consideration. According to Roy Arnold, vice chancel lor search committee chairman and chair man of Food Science and Technology be cause of the possibility of damaging the position's attractiveness, the names were not -to be released until a decision was reached. Arnold said the search committee sub mitted "four to six" recommendations to the chancellor out of "more than 100" applications and nominations. He refused to announce the other recommendations. Massengale and Woods are the only can didates on the final list who have visited the UNL campus, Arnold said. Breckenridge speculated that the final recommendation would be before the NU Board of Regents at their December meet ing, but also refused to disclose the other candidates' names. . The final decision on the new vice chan cellor is vested with the regents, who will act following the recommendation of Breckenridge and NU President D.B. Varner. The regents' choice will fill the po sition vacated by Duane Acker, now presi dent of Kansas State University. Massengale, 42, currently is chairman of the Agronomy Dept. at the University of Arizona, director of the American Society of Agronomy and the Arizona Crop Im provement Association, and past president of the American Crop Science Board. Woods has taught at UNL and Iowa State University. He now teaches at Purdue University. In 1969, he was honored by Murray State College in Murray, Ky., his alma mater, as outstanding alumnus of the year. Both men are natives of Kentucky. inside Stopped: Young Socialists told selling their literature on UNL is against regulations... p.5 Also Find: , Editorials. . . p.4 Arts and Entertainment p.8 Sports p.10 Crossword p.12 Short Stuff p.2 Weather Thursday: Sunny and warmer. Highs ranging from 45 to 50. Westerly to south westerly winds from 10-20 m.pji. Thursday night: Continued clear, with lows in the high 20s to low 30s. Friday: Mostly sunny and wanner. High temperatures in the mid-50s. 4 I' I f i 1; h it b - i i I-