Cmttttrtlnrt La% (Eampith Serving Storrs Since 1896

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Cmttttrtlnrt La% (Eampith Serving Storrs Since 1896 iros 6-/0 ",'_■« '*','.' '• ''■.' *i' 'i-.' '•■•,"•'' /' •«* *•»•/•'.• * • i •' *' Cmttttrtlnrt la% (EampitH Serving Storrs Since 1896 VOL. LXXXI NO. 6 STORRS, CONNECTICUT Monday, September 19. 1977 Fast-food chain moving to campus early next month The Campus Restaurant will be moving from the building within By MARK A. DUPUIS a few weeks. Rohrbach said, and Hardees. a fast-food ham- Hardees will be starting its burger chain now developing interior renovation project by menus geared to college stud- sometime early next month. ents, will move into the Post According to the tentative Office block location which for 21 timetable. Hardees will open by years has housed the Campus about January I. Rohrbach said. Restaurant. John Rohrbach, He added that the firm plans to assistant vice president for renovate the interior of the finance and administration, said building at a total cost of Sunday. between $150.00 and $160,000 Rohrbach said the move of the Rohrbach said the possibility longtime campus tenant was of the Campus Restaurant mov made necessary by increasing ing has been discussed several rent charges and overall Univer- times during the past few years, sity plans for a major renovation however, final action became of the Post Office block, which necessary because of the inc- Leaving soon reasing rent in the location. Staff Photo by George Clemence houses several other stores and •he campus post office. The assistant vice president The Campus Restaurant on Rt. 195 won't be there much longer as the owners announced they have said the Campus now pays about decided to move the restaurant down the road to a site formerly occupied by Eaton Farms and Arruro'g. half the cost per square foot that is paid by the other businesses housed in the block. He said the University has signed a lease with Hardees for Self-diagnosis starts at clinic the location, saying all that must be worked out now are the details of what work the Univer- The University Student Health Sydney Ayotte, director of are. They will then be given a A mirror, flashlight, and sity will do to the building and Services has created a "do-it nurses there. sheet of paper telling them what what will be left for Hardees. tongue depressors will be avail- yourself cold clinic where stu- At the clinic, which begins to do for their particular University administrators have dents will be able to fill out a operation this week, students symptoms, and will be allowedto able at the clinic to help students been looking at changes for the form instead of seeing a doctor to with colds will fill out a question- select an over-the-counter drug with their self-diagnosis. Post Office block for several idagnose ailments, according to aire to determine how ill they to treat those symptoms. years. One of the foremost has Ayotte said that if the question- been trying to get "high-use" aire indicates something more operations to rent space in the building block. serious than a cold, the student Plans for construction of a new Resume comes into question will then be seen by a doctor or Storrs Post Office down Rt. 195 from the block are in the final nurse. stages by the U.S. Postal Ser- According to Ayotte. the idea vice, a move which will open the a speech he listed in a Septem- largest building in the block to A lawsuit filed by a former has filed suit against the Univer- for the clinic originated at the UConn assistant professor of ber 1975 resume. sity for denying her tenure in some other use. English who was denied tenure Medlicott refused to comment 1973. University of Massachussetts. Rohrbach said the owners of has sparked an investigation into on the matter. The resume was introduced as where the program has been a the Campus Restaurant weren't an allegedly falsified resume evidence in an attempt to point prepared to spend the money "It is a complicated'affair and success. submitted by another professor. that would be needed to renovate it is going to take time until it is out the differences in the inspec- Julius A. Elias, dean of the She added "Self-diagnosis is the interior of the building or to properly concluded," Elias said. tion given each resume. Medli- college of liberal arts and cott was promoted to full profes- all part of growing up. We just pay the same rent as neighbor- sciences, said Sunday an in- ing tenants. The resume came under attack sor in 1973. thought we'd provide them with vestigation was being conducted by Louis Winer, a New Haven Similar resumes are prepared Before selecting Hardees for to determine whether Prof. Alex- attorney representing a former by all faculty members for a little old-fashioned how-to- the location, he said the Univer- ander Medlicott actually did assistant professor of English, mother-yourself. since they sity had negotiated with several publish two articles and present "arcia Lieberman. Lieberman Cont. on page 5 don't live with mother any fast-food chains and decided more." Hardees was best-suited for UConn. m Courageous sweeps Cup -INSIDE TODAY- THE UCONN FOOTBALL TEAM made it two straight losses NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI)— Ted Turner's Cou- ,twice more to send the Courageous across the Saturday when the Huskies fell 38-7 to the Midshipmen of the rageous, almost an afterthought in U.S. plans for finish line by its second widest winning margin of Naval Academy. Story page 12. defense of the America's Cup, routed Australia for the series to the accompaniment of blaring horns the fourth consecutive time Sunday by a 2 minute. from the spectator boats of enthusiastic Americans 25-second margin to win the 23rd renewal of the who set up a mile-long wall of greeting en route to THE UCONN SOCCER TEAM fared little better as they were international yachting classic with a 4-0 sweep. the finish line. beaten by the University of Vermont 2-1 in overtime. Turner displayed supberb seamanship in the Considered a trial horse when it sailed into final race, leading all the way. Courageous' brash Newport Harbor last June for the start of the yacht skipper jibed, tacked, feinted and covered with the trials. Courageous proceeded to win 26 of the 35 THE COMMONS DINING HALL will not be renovated for a expertise expected of this feisty sailor who has races against Hood and Lowell North of Enterprise while, until the funds to pay for the changes are found. Story page been sailing boats since he was three years old and to earn the approval of the New York Yacht Club to he easily outclassed Australia skipper Noel Robins. defend the "auld Cup." And Turner wasn't too proud to accept a helping Winner over Australia's Southern Cross by 4-0 in hand. He used a blue-and-white spinnaker 1974. Courageous now joins Columbia and Intrepid borrowed from Ted Hood of the Independence on THE TWO CO-CHAIRMEN of the senate committee that as the only double winners in the classic that dates confirmed Bert Lance as Director of the Office of Management the fourth leg Sunday to stretch a 2:11 lead another back to 1870. The U.S. never has lost a defense. and Budget say they still think he should resign even after 24 seconds on the important fifth downwind leg. Robins was the Aussie hopeful this time as he hearing three days of testimony from the embattled director. Courageous extended the lead appreciably on the swept past France and then Sweden in the final Story page 8. final leg as its well-knit crew turned winches at foreign eliminations. breakneck speed to bring the $1.5 million sloop Cont. on page 11 across Australia's bow on tack. Turner tacked Connecticut Daily Campus, Monday. September 19, 1977 ©uttttwttrut latlg ®a«ttni0 Mark Dupuis is a tight end Serving Storrs Since 1896 To the Editor, matters. To condemn one small group of students Whatever the merits of Mark Dupuis are as is discriminatory, even if they supposedly repre- editor of the Daily Campus. 1 believe he would sent the most well-informed group at UConn. make a bette tight end for the Houston Oilers. ^ He should have indicated the greater problem Mark A. Dupuis His recent critical article suggested that UConn's EdItor-ln-Chlef that the results of the test showed — the vast CrasoK.Spery i Hill III beginning journalism students are ignorant and majority of students aren't familiar with the •iMkwM Manager Managing Editor uninformed. He's right. They are basically principal news, on campus or in the world. Vivian 8. Martin unaware of the important news and personages. F Auociiti Editor PattyBurke However, Mr. Dupuis failed to make the noint that «S* everyone is basically unacquainted with these andals of the week Why are you here? How did you decide you wanted to come to UConn? Cost? Couldn't get into somewhere else? Closest to home? Too often, when high school students decide where they want to go to school, UConn comes up as their last choice — the place to go when everywhere else says no. Last week, the University made a decision which we hope will change the minds of at least some potential students so they put UConn higher on their list of where to go to school. The announcement that Kenneth G. Wilson, vice president of academic affairs, will seek to stop the sale of term papers and research materials on campus is a welcome one.
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