Affirmative action tops agenda Affirmative action and com mittee vacancies confront the University General Faculty today. The faculty will meet at 3:X p.m. in Room 150 Science. The first motion, introduced by Student University Affairs Board representative Molly Brady, calls for the creation of a University Affirmative Action Compliance Committee, a standing faculty committee focusing on af firmative action compliance on campus. As an ended by the University Senate last week, the proposed committee would be composed of five faculty members, three students and two classified staff persons (all appointed by the University president) with the Mniuor«itv affirmative action director serving as an ex-officio, non-voting member. According to the motion, the new committee would evaluate the University’s progress in complying with Title IX (with Title IX Task Force recommendations as guidelines), Chapter 204 of the Oregon Law and other affirmative action legislation. The committee would then report its findings to the University president and faculty. Also on the agenda is a motion introduced by Journalism professor Charles Duncan. It recommends that vacancies on the Faculty Advisory Council and the Faculty Personnel Committee be filled by appointees of the Faculty Committee on Com At the Senate meeting last Wednesday, Duncan said he introduced the proposal to ex pedite the process of filling such vacancies, it often requires as long as two months to fill these vacancies under the current elective system. Duncan's proposal failed to secure the approval of the Senate, however. Several senators agreed that the current elective system was too slow but felt that elective committees should nevertheless be filled by means of election. They suggested the answer to the problem was to revamp the election process instead of eliminating it. Also at today’s meeting the Student Faculty Grievance Committee will make public its recommendations concerning the alleged misuse of authority in the Academic Opportunity Program (AOP) last year. The grievance committee undertook the investigation after the issue reached the Faculty Senate last year. The allegations were make by AOP students at a hearing last February, In which two administrators of the program were singled out for complaint. Those two administrators, Chris Munoz and Bob Campillo, are now out of the AOP program and in other jobs in the University administration. Manoz is now assistant Registrar, and Campillo is Associate Director of Ad missions. Christmas party slated The Faculty Club’s Ho Ho Party No. 2 is scheduled for Thursday, 4 to 7 p.m. Ail faculty club members are invited to the event, at the faculty center across from the EMU. Nancy King, Peter Boel and Ed Coleman will be among the musicians entertaining, and the president of the club promises “there will be appropriate food and beverages." Members who still owe dues can pay them at the door. Students appointed to coach selection committee Two students were appointed to the advisory committee to select a new head football coach by the ASUO and basketball ticket resale procedures vwre outlined Tuesday. The ASUO Committee on ^ Committees selected senior Jim Dulcich and junior Jetea Johnson to serve on the advisory com mittee from a field of 29 ap plicants. Dulcich is a finance major who has served on the Women's In tercollegiate Athletics. Intramural Sports Councils, Intercollegiate Athletic Committee and co chaired the committee on reserved seating. According to Mark Flaherty, committee on committees member, Dulcich was chosen on his experience. Andrea Gallately, Student University Affairs Board chairer, says Dulcich has been involved in football ail his life and "understands the aame.” Johnson, an honors college applicant, was chosen because she is familiar with the athletic department and knows what the relationship between a coach and players should be, Gallately says. She added that Johnson gained Japanese class offered A course in conversational Japanese is being offered by the University during the winter quarter on a pass-no pas* basis. The two-credit course is designed fa people who meet and visit with Japanese visitas to the United States a who plan to visit Japan. The instruction will emphasize everyday, conversational Japanese and does not involve the language’s complex grammatical structure. Learning the Japanese writing system is optional in the class. The class will meet every Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. For more in formation contact Yoko McClain at 606-4010. \ NOTICE! The Bookstore will Buy Back Texts for Winter Term through Dec. 31. Texts that will be used during winter term can be sold back to the Bookstore for Vi of the discounted price of a new copy. Other titles listed in used bookdealer’s catalogs will also be bought. Buy Back Counter Uof O Bookstore 13th at Kincaid 686-4331 that familiarity while married to a football player. Other members on the selection committee Include Dave Wilcox, alumnus, Jack Hen derson, student athlete, Joe Wade, acting director of student services, Barbara Nicholls, counseling center and Karl Nestvold, chairer of the in tercollegiate athletic committee. The basketball ticket resale program will be instituted again this year. It allows athletic pass holders to sell back tickets for any game they don’t wish to I... attend and gives students without passes a chance to at tend games. Students who wish to sell back a tickets must take their athletic passes to the Athletic Depart ment ticket window by 5 p.m. three working days before the scheduled game. The pass will be punched for the game sold and the ticket holder reimbursed $1.25 per game. Those tickets will go on sale for prospective buyers two working days before each game at $2 each. Any tickets remaining at 5 p.m. the day of a game will be sold to the general public for $2.50. Students will enter Mac Court through doors 7 and 12 under the marquee and the two back doors facing the covered tennis courts this year. The lines on University Street will go opposite directions to allow easier, faster entrance. The physical plant will again use vans as baracades to prevent possible injuries and keep gate crashers from entering the lines. Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. 1 How much do you think an Army officer earns, to start? More than $900 a month including subsistence and quarters allowances. More than a lot of college graduates are earning today in executive training programs. And with Army ROTC behind you, you’ll have had your executive training during college. So when you graduate you’re already a full-fledged executive. With the same prestige, privileges and responsibility as executives in other companies. All of this, your first year out of college. Whether you decide to make the Army a career, or take your leadership experience out into the civilian job market, you’ll be way ahead. Because you’ll have Army ROTC behind you. Army ROTC. Learn what it takes to lead. / y' / - / / S For full / details call: r/ Phil Hichev / Asst. Professor of Military Science 686.1102