<,,,~.. / GC atersiiminorityaffairs ' ve ''' ;r, CommitteeV dds new Positions By PAUL TERWILLIGER Student Government Council re-' vamped the present organization of its controversial office of Mi- nority Affairs during last night's meeting. The present directorships underi the vice president for minority af-1 fairs were replaced by a minority affairs committee that includes po-4 sitionls- for religious, ethnic and+ sexual groups as, well as racial minorities: THE PROPOSAL, according toa sponsor SGC member David Faye,; was to "simplify the organization"1 of minority affairs groups related to SGC, and to expand the repre-; sentationp of the committee to in- clude a wider variety of minorities rep resent atives meet wit studenits (Continued from Page 1) Bobroff and Kaplan explaining ing fellows if they agree to the their grievances against the ad- new demand. ministration, dating from last fall. The final statement sent to the "All TFs are not paid the same TFs read: "We strongly urge that wages," said Kaplan. "There is the TFs demand that tuition be' no standardization within the Uni- frozen." versity." Organizer Ann Bobroff assured KAPLAN went on to explain that on campis. Faye claimed the minority af- fairs committee defined in the SGC compiled code allowed for a maximum of two appointments to that body to be. made per term. Former SGC President Lee Gill's administration felt more positions were needed, and created advisory staff in charge of minority affairs instead of altering the code. FAYE CLAIMED that this was actally illegal and the new com- mittee would in effect legalize it. An amendment was proposed by Mat Hoffman that would ban voting for all assistant directors of the new committee without vote. According to Hoffman, the as- sistant directors "would outnumber all the other minority representa- tives put together," and thus would overwhelm the council. The amendment failed. THE MAIN MOTION was passed almost unanimously in what may have been the quietest SGC session in months. After the meeting had adjourned, some of the members of the abol- ished minority affairs committee challenged Faye concerning his proposal. the students that the TFs would try to cover all class material miss- ed during a strike, and assured them also that a demand was added to prohibit penalization of striking students. The meeting began quietly, with in the fall their demands were ver- bally met only when the GE9 threatened to go on strike. "The one tactic that that makes the University pay attention to us is when we talk about strike," said Bobroff. he Kiwanis rummage sale omethngor erybody