ATLANTA - Georgia State University awarded more bachelor's degrees to black students last year than any other non-historically black college in the country, officials report. <br>
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Preliminary statistics from the Department of Education for the 2000-01 academic year show that 743 black students received bachelor's degrees from Georgia State, 30.1 percent of the bachelor's degrees the school awarded. <br>
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University administrators say they have worked to maintain a diverse student population by offering a balance of academic programs and social events. The Office of African-American Student Services and Programs was opened in 1990. <br>
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``We're getting more minority faculty, better quality undergraduate programs and are attracting more students into our graduate programs,'' Georgia State associate provost Bill Fritz said. <br>
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``We made an environment in which minorities could succeed all students could succeed.'' <br>
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The downtown Atlanta university, the second-largest public university in Georgia, enrolls more black students than any other public or private college in the state. Last fall, 6,878 of the school's 25,743 students or 27 percent were black. The largest campus the University of Georgia, with 32,317 students enrolled 1,832 black students. Clark Atlanta University, Georgia's largest historically black school, enrolled 4,186. <br>
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``Students come on campus, and it's so large,'' said Doris Derby, director of African-American student services and programs at GSU. ``They have to have a place where they can feel at home.'' <br>
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For the second year, nearby Georgia Tech ranked first in the nation in the number of engineering master's and doctoral degrees awarded to black students, according to preliminary statistics from the Department of Education. <br>
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However, Tech fell to second place in the number of engineering bachelor's degrees 107 earned by black students. North Carolina A&T State University, a historically black school, awarded the most, with 120.
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