The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 26, 1972, Page PAGE 13, Image 13

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Action plan
Continued from Page 1
employment of persons by the University."
The document states that " . . . the employer (the
University) hereby agrees with the Commission to
establish a specific program of affirmative action set
forth below to assure that the recruitment and hiring
practices of the employer afford equal employment
opportunity for minority group members and
women.
"... All recruitment, hiring, promotions, training
practices and all other terms ... shall be maintained
and conducted in a manner which does not
discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, religion
or national origin ..."
"The signing of this agreement is not an admission
by the employer of any violation of said title and
statute. It does reflect his desire to take affirmative
action , . . to assure that employment opportunities
are made available to minority group individuals and
women." The Regents approved the agreement
January 14, 1972.
A special clause was included in the 1972-73
budget to exempt women whose salaries needed
adjustment from a $600 maximum increase set by the
Legislature, according to Howard Neville,
executive vice-chancellor for administration.
The clause reads, ". . . no employee should receive
an increase of more than $600 per annum above his
June, 1972, salary . ... except that an additional
adjustment may be made for outstanding
performance or to correct salary inequities."
The Federal Equal Opportunity Act of 1972
allows court action for non-compliance regarding the
employment of minorities and women.
"Before, there was nothing obligatory to make us
comply. Before they were doing it as a good faith
showing. With the Federal Equal Opportunity Act of
1972, court action can be taken for non-compliance.
Each step makes it more difficult not to comply if
you're a federal agency," Coffey said.
Drug consultant speaks
A member of the President's Commission on
Marijuana and Drug Abuse will be on the UNL
campus Tuesday, May 9, to speak and meet
with students.
Dr. J. Thomas Ungerleider has been
consultant on drug abuse to many agencies
including branches of the United States Senate,
the National Institute of Mental Health, the
Department of Justice, the Public Health
Service, the California Medical Association, and
the state of California Attorney General on the
Problems of Drug Abuse among students in
California. He also served as a consultant to
NBC's Program Broadcast Standard's on
Television Treatment of Programs involving
LSD, to Universal and Paramount Studios and
to over a dozen special films on drug abuse.
Ungerleider has appeared in radio and
television documentaries and has published over
75 articles, and one book and has contributed
information on hallucinogens to six books and
an encyclopedia.
Since 1962 he has been an assistant
professor of psychiatry at the University of
California at Los Angeles. In 1966 he founded
and has since been the director of Project
DARE (Drug Abuse Research and Education)
in Los Angeles.
Since 1968 he has been on the Board of
Advisors (drug section) of the National Drug
and Sex Forum, and the American Social
Health Association's National Drug Abuse Task
Force. He is also on the Los Angeles County
Medical Association's Public Information
Committee and Panel of Spokesman on Drug
(LSD) Abuse.
Nebraska books
'merit attention'
Three books from the
University of Nebraska Press
lead the April Western Ratings
Checklist of books "meriting
nationwide attention" in The
Roundup, magazine of the
Western Writers of America.
They are Cheyenne
Memories by John Stands in
Timger and Margot Liberty,
Custer's Gold by Donald
Jackson, and Lost Pony Tracks
by Ross Santee.
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11
Wednesday
10 a.m. Nebraska Union-Y.W.C.A.
Pastors
1:30 p.m. Union psychological
counselor at large
2 p.m. Union Computer Planning
Committee
3:30 p.m. U n i on-Builders
Student Faculty Relations
3:30 p.m. Union Tassels Ice Cream
Sale
3:30 p.m. Sheldon-film "Lost
Horizon"
4 p.m. Union ASUN Senate
meeting
4 p.m. Union Builders Calendar
and Directory
4:30 p.m. Union-Builders Red
Coats
4:45 p.m. Union Union Planning
Committee
5:30 p.m. U n ion E ngineering
Toastmasters
5:45 p.m. Union Kappa Kappa Psi
6 p.m. Union Marx Brothers
movies
6 p.m. Union Red Cross
6:30 p.m. Union Kosmet Klub
7 p.m. Union Inter Fraternity
Council
7 p.m. Union Alpha Lambda Delta
7 p.m. Union Builders Executive
7 p.m. Union Mass Choral
rehearsal
7 p.m. Sheldon-film "Lost
Horizon"
7 p.m. Raymond TV
lounge European travel Study
Workshop
7:30 p.m. Union Hockey Club
7:30 p.m. Union Executive Dean's
Search Committee
7:30 p.m. Union math counselors
7:30 p.m. Unlon-U of N Wildlife
Club
7:30 p.m. Union Builders
7:30 p.m. Union Nebraska Free
Univertity-"European Travel"
7:45 p.m. Union Alpha Lambda
Delta dessert
8 p.m. Union Sigma Delta Chi
8:30 p.m. Union Marx Brothers
movies
9 p.m. Union Kappa Alpha Psi
9 p.m. Selleck Cafeteria European
travel workshop
9 p.m. Union-Students for Wally
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1972
THE DAILY NEB R ASK AN
PAGE 13
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