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THE MAIL BOX SUPER DISCOUNT SOUNDS Lowest overall prices anywhere on 8-track tapes, cas- settes, and provocative and groovy posters at super-low discount prices. Speediest delivery and completely guar- anteed. Send for our current catalog of selections and their low prices. We have a complete line of rock, pop blues, soul, country-western, folk, jazz, classical, gospel and soundtrack. For free catalog mail your request to: The Mail Box, P.O. Box 2417 San Francisco, Calif. 94126 I I I: I I I (Continued from Page 1) of crucial concern to the faculty- the tightening of the University's budget. Within the coming month, the coalition's Task Force on Budget- ing and Priorities expects to issue a'report which echoes the faculty's sharp criticism of the recent budget cutbacks imposed by the University administration for the 1971-72 fiscal year. The administration ordered each school and college to make tenta- tive reductions in expenditures -in order to allow a sizeable increase in faculty and staff salaries for 1971-72. The task force's report is ex- pected to propose methods for generating the salary increases without cutting expenditures for instruction, according to chemis- .try Prof. Thomas Dunn, a task force member. Dunn says the report will detail specific items in the University's' budget which could be cut in- stead. He mentions intercollegiate athletics as one possible item, but declines to comment on the others. Meanwhile, the coalition has or- ganized four other task forces which are devoting their efforts to: -Promoting "rational dialogue" as a method for achieving reform at the University, rather than disruption and acts of violence; COPJ gains i* -Establishing an internal judi- ciary at the University which the faculty can accept as an adequate procedure for disciplining people1 involved in disruptions; -Promoting greater equity in the status of women employed by the University, or enrolled as stu- dents; and -Helping the University achieve a black enrollment of 10 per cent by 1973-74, which was pledged by the administration during the class strike last spring. Charged with studying the safety of "rational dialogue" at the University, the Task Force on] Dissent and Academic Freedom has directed itself at what Prof. Coalition aims for change within system Eckstein calls the most important single issue to the faculty-"the integrity of the classroom." "We would find it intolerable to have disruption of the classroom. in any form for whatever cause or whatever reason," Eckstein says. "We don't consider it a legitimate form of protest." According to political science Prof. Richard Solomon, chairman of the task force, a major focus of the group's efforts is to make sure that the University has suf- ficient control over the use of civil force on campus-such as po- lice or National Guardsmen. The Task Force on Governance, Decision - Making, a n d Judicial Process has taken an active role in the deliberations of the Com- mittee on a Permanent University Judiciary and has presented a number of recommendations to the committee. Tice, ' chairman of the task force, admits that the recom- mendations have not had a sub- stantial effect on the contents of the committee's final proposal (see story, Page 1), but says that input from the task force kept the com- mittee going when it appeared at an impasse. The coalition's Task Force on Programs for Black and Other Disadvantaged Students is at- tempting to aid the administra- tion inimplementing the black admissions program. U' to submit new plan to HEW;0 Fleming maps program in letter '0 Rec (Continued from Page 1) ials and HEW representatives met in Chicago last month when the previous plan was submitted. HEW will still have to decide whether the new program meets the requirements necessary for the University to be "awardable" for federal contracts. Since HEW made its original charges, a $300,000 contract be- tween the University and the As- sociation for International De- velopment has been withheld. There had been reports that the University had tried to get sup- port from ther universities to re- sist compliance with HEW's de- mands. The University, however, has denied these charges. The demands, which were offic- ially released for the first time by the University were essentially the same as those previously re- ported in the December issue of Science magazine. The original HEW demands in- clude requirements that the Uni- versity: -achieve salary equity between current male and female employes in every job category within the University which is currently oc- cupied by both male and female employes; -compensate through the pay- ment of back wages, each female employe who has lost wages due to discriminatory treatment by the University; -achieve a ratio of female em- ployment in academic positions at least equivalent to their avail- ability as evidenced by applica- tions for employment by qualified females for those positions; -improve the ratio of female admissions to all Ph.D graduate programs in which admissions are connected with specific employ- ment opportunity such as teach- ing and research assistants. When the new plan is filed, it will include specific numerical goals and timetables which HEW called for in its response to the University's first plan, Fleming said. Until then, Fleming's letter com- mits the University to achieving salary equity within 30 days from yesterday between "male and fe- male employes having the s a m e qualifications, responsibilities, and performance in the same job class- ification." Previously the University had said salary equity and advance- ment would be a primary consid- eration as the University person- nel department continued to re- view and evaluate the status of staff members. Fleming's letter said the Univer- sity will initiate an immediate re- view of files and a complaint pro- cedure to determine such inequit- ies. The letter also says that the University will compensate a n y woman who has lost wages due to discrimination on the basis of sex back to Oct. 13, 1968, the date the University signed its first contract under the Executive Order which prohibits such discrimination by federal contractors. In the original affirmative ac- tion plan, . the University had agreed to pay back individuals re- troactively to the date they filed a complaint of sex discrimination. Fleming's letter said the Uni- versity will no longer segregate male and female applicants and employes for purposes of recruit- ment, placement, transfer, or promotion in any job classifica- tion. In the new plan, female em- ployes who possess qualifications equivalent to those of higher level male employes will be given pri- ority consideration for promotions to higher level positions. o 0 Lawyers fati to show at Van DerH out trial (Continued from Page 1) time because of "technical diffi- there were no specific procedures, culties". He said that he "reserv- Shaw stated that he would make ed the right to report to the facul- decisions as problems occur. Shaw ty and if necessary request a clos- later indicated that basic due pro- ed hearing." cess procedures were being observ- The judicial panel was appoint- ed. ed specifically for this case by At this point Van Der H o u t the administrative board of the refused to go into any more pro- literary college, which oversees cedural questions until his lawyers discipline matters within the col- could be there, and Galler began lege. This is standard procedure his testimony. for discipline cases. The p a n e 1 Numerous objections to the trial was supposed to be composed of were against raised by Van Der Hout and some spectators. Shaw two students, two faculty menbers 9 decided to adjourn to a future and two administrators. r --- --- I I I. - ° 00 4 * TIME TO MOVE? WINTER TERM VACANCIES MEN AND WOMEN 4 MONTH LEASES -