NEW DELHI: A committee from Delhi University will soon be meeting lieutenant governor Anil Baijal to reverse the order of Delhi government converting Netaji Subhas Institute of Technology (NSIT) into a university. The decision comes after the new varsity’s inauguration on September 26. This was one of the matters discussed in a chaotic executive council meeting of DU.The meeting saw a tussle between the elected members and the administration on a number of issues ranging from appointment of teachers, non-teaching staff, promotions and the absence of a pro-VC and other statutory bodies.After over 24 hours of discussions, the meeting was adjourned till October 3 deferring even the tripartite MoU of MHRD.Senior EC member A K Bhagi said over 18 hours were spent on ‘zero hour’ discussion. “All 24 issues shared earlier and many others were raised by the elected representatives. We got equal support from all four EC members elected through university court,” he added.The EC will meet again after the finance committee and academic council meetings. The discussions would include promotion and pension, such as past service count committee report, sending of expert panels for promotion to colleges, adoption of revised promotion and pension, among other issues.“The VC has been directed by EC to bring UGC-financed BVoc and MVoc courses, revision of MA courses and ordinance amendment for qualifications of teachers in the light of UGC regulations for the consideration of academic council,” Bhagi said.On the issue of CBCS system in PG courses, Bhagi said, “This year, DU students graduated under the CBCS scheme and grading system. While they were to be admitted under the new scheme in PG courses, they got the old scheme because the syllabus was not placed in the AC meeting before the start of the current academic session.”The EC members also raised concerns about maintenance of secrecy and sourcing of PG/MPhil/PhD test being conducted by private agency. “Students lodged complaints, but no visible action was taken,” said a member. The DU administration said that a committee is looking into the issues.