Fuller Resigns As Lecturer
By MARIE NAHIKIAN
Howard Fuller, part-time lecturer in the School of Social
Work at UNC-Chapel Hill, has
resigned his position according
to an announcement made last
Friday by Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson.
Fuller, who became known for
his controversial anti-poverty
work in Durham, quit his $1,000-
a-semester lecturing job because
"the stress of my fulltime job is
increasing," as reported in the
Daily Tar Heel.
Fuller now works for the foundation for Community Improvement, but was highly critized by
Governor Dan K. Moore for his
involvement with Negro rallies
and marches in Durham this
past summer while employed by
the North Carolina Fund.
A guest lecturer at NSA's recent Black Power Forum on this
campus, Fuller was praised by
Dean C. Wilson Anderson of the
School of Social Work. Anderson
said in a statement in the DTH,
"We thought he did a very good
job as instructor. We regret the
necessity for his resigning."
Fuller was recently arrested
in Durham on charges of
assaulting a police officer during
a Negro protest. He is now free
on $300 bond.
Fuller received his B.S. in
sociology from Carroll Coleege
in Wisconsin and his Master's
degree in community organization from Western Reserve
University in Ohio. He has worked as a community organizer in
both Fayetteville and Durham.