Fired Teacher Mulls Legal Action Wallace Files for Divorce
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INSIDE TODAY THANKS TO THE WILLI- MANTIC CHRONICLE the THE JAZZ CRAZE of the HARDEE'S is currently neg- 1940's is coming alive again in MIRROR LAKE'S low water otiating with the University to Daily Campus is now able to level will be staying that way carry United Press Interna- many clubs, including Mab- BERT LANCE is better suited take the building that is now for "public relations work" for a time, at while UConn tional Wire photos. The rey's of New London. Jazz fans occupied by the Campus Res- than for the position of director physical plant workers repair Chronicle is making the pic- have been regularly attending taurant, but the owner of the of the Office of Management demaged drainage pipes. tures available to the Campus Magrey's in what seems to be Campus Restaurant says any and Budget, federal examiners Story, photo page 3. free of charge, enabling the a successful venture by the talk about him moving out is management of the club. Story said Monday. Story page 9. just "rumors." Story page 4. paper to increase its content without straining its budget. page 5. (tettttcttat latlrj (EamjMH Serving Storrs Since 1896 VOL. LXXXI NO. 2 STORRS, CONNECTICUT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1977 Fired teacher mulls legal action By GEOFFREY GOLSON fields." Taylor's lawyer, Paul her suit she claims she was and 1 will not speculate on his," soon as possible." After class A disgruntled assistant Eng- Winer, "has invested a great denied tenure by a predominate- Taylor said. Taylor told the Daily Campus lish professor who has received a deal of research into University ly male committee because of William Moynihan. head of the that he was denied tenure by a letter of termination said he will procedures" regarding tenure. her fiminist activities. Winer and English Department, said Mon- committee of his department present a list of unspecified UConn lawyer John McKenna Taylor did not say if denial of day night, "I'm up in the air demands to the University ad- stated Monday night "I am tenure is the focal point of their about the whole situation" but peers. Taylor said he asked for a ministration today. expecting a letter from Winer demands, but Taylor did not rule added Taylor told him to expect a leave of absence in order to find R. Lorring Taylor, who has tomorrow (Tuesday)." out the possibility. letter from his (Taylor's) lawyer. another job. Taylor said he was been teaching English courses Winer is also representing "Mr. Winer is preparing Taylor told students in his denied the leave of absence and from Icelandic Literature to the UConn assistant English profes- actions" Taylor said Monda English 264 course on William his tstus with the University was works of William Blake for six sor Marcia Lieberman. Lieber- night, but didn't say whether he Blake. Monday morning, the now "questionable." Taylor said years, said his attorney "is man's suit against the University would accept Winer's "guid- course would "probably not be Univerity officials have over- handling two cases at the Uni- for denial of tenure has been ance" or not. continued" and the students ruled student evaluations of his versity which are in related pending for more than a year. In "Lawyers have various motives "should seek alternatives as perofrmance. Students give 'Son of Sam' Supreme Court seat By MARK A. DUPU1S ly identified by students as the ism 111 and for years has drawn Whether David Berkowitz- nation's defense secretary and statewide attention for the stud- the man New York police believe thePresident's chief energy ents' questionable identifica- is the "Son of Sam" will advisor tions. Last year, the test drew ever make it before the U.S. The test is given each semester nationwide publicity when Supreme Court is too early to to incoming students in Journal- Continued on page 4 tell, but for at least one journal- ism student, he's already there as a justice. That was just one of the responses beginning journalism Campus records loss students wrote into the Journal- ism Department's annual orient- The Daily Campus completed accounted for in a capital ex- ation test, where students are its 1976-77 publishing year with pense account and not in the asked during their first week of an operating budget deficit total- operating budget. classes to identify names and ling $10,923.17. a University However, the editor said, he places in the news. auditor's report of the newspa- thinks the poor performance in And, if the "Son of Sam" is on per's operations shows. the operating budget requires the Supreme court, Jimmy Bres- Of that figure. S4.638 was immediate attention and he add- lin, the man to whom he wrote plugged into the newspaper's ed the newspaper's new editors from a psychiatric hospital, is capital expenditures program for and business staff have imple- tied to the mob and not a the purchase of a new headlining mented immediate cost-saving columnist for the New York^aily machine, which the newspaper's measures aimed at ending the News, according to another stud- editor-in-chief. Mark A. Dupuis, new publishing year in the black. ent. says was a needed purchase Craig K. Spery. business A total of 112 students took the aimed at future growth of the manager, said. "We are confi- orientation test, botching up paper. dent these new procedures we everyone from the editor of the "Listing the headliner pur- have begun will be successful." Daily Campus to the director of chase under the operating bud- Spery said 1st year's perfor- United Press International the federal Office of Manage- get leaves a somewhat mislead- mance was a " surprising disap- It was a school as usual scene as students reported for class at ment and Budget. ing view of the Daily Campus' pointment." He said the opera- financial position." Dupuis said, South Boston High School, they were reporting for the first time The director of that office. Bert tion was a result of "bad adding that the newspaper's management" on the newspa- as a group after a three-day orientation program. Lance, who has come under increasing controversy for his Board of Finance had asked that per's staff and steps are being personal finances, was incorrect- such capital expenditures be taken to prevent a recurrence. Wallace files for divorce MONTGOMERY. ALA. (UPI) Mrs. Wallace, who moved out lawyers confirmed last week that which she denied. marriage produced no children. she still has hundreds of hours of In moving out of the mansion —Gov. George C. Wallace Mon- of the governor's mansion last Mrs. Wallace, a former profes- day filed for divorce from his Tuesday, could not be reached taped conversations involving last week. Mrs. Wallace said the governor, and said thost she could "no longer endure the sional water skier who briefly wife of bVi years, Cornelia, who for immediate comment. Ira sought a career as a singer, was was at his side when he was shot DeMent, one of her lawyers, tapes might be used at a divorce vulgarity, threats and abuse" trial. that had marked her marriage. divorced from Florida citrus-heir and crippled in 1972—ind who refused to comment on the suit. John Snivery before she married later tapped his bedroom tele- Wallace's office said he would She was at the governor's side on May 15. 1972, when Wallace A hearing before Montgomery Wallace. The Snivelys had two phone conversations. have no comment on the "pri- County Circuit Court Judge John children, who lived in the man- The 58-year-old governor's vate matter." was shot and crippled by Arthur Bremer. but in the years that W. Davis was scheduled for sion until Mrs. Wallace left. petition claimed there exists The Wallace marriage has Sept. 20 at 8 a.m. "such a complete incompatibility been on the rocks for more than a followed they grew apart. She The Wallaces have noi been of temperament" that he and the year, a fact that became public told friends Wallace became The Wallaces were married seen together in public since a 38-year-old Cornelia "can no when it was revealed Mrs. extremely jealous and said ru- Jan. 4." 1971. a few days before divorce petition drawn up by an longer live together as man and Wallace had tapped her hus- mors were spread that she was Wallace was inaugurated for his attorney for the governor was wife." band's bedroom telephone. Her having extra-marital affairs. second term as governor. The leaked to reporters Aug. 1, (UnnmttitvA Sattg (Hamjnw <S* Serving Storrs Since 1896 M«rt A. Dupuis Cr»ig K. Sp«ry John HIM III r-lit-Chlaf Buslnost Manager Managing Editor Vivian B. Martin Associate Editor Big business burgers We do it all for you. We do it your way. Maybe, now. one student more will stay on campus this weekend. The University is bringing a touch of home—albeit a touch we thought we could do without—to the campus. Hardees. one of the big fast-food outlets, is moving into the bucolic . academic atmosphere of Storrs. After a false alarm a •£>£ CWtfuL oJT-NOE Hftj -Of/vf Q**i*W WAcul oupleof years back when we thought the Golden Arches would be invading the Commons building, it now appears that things are getting in order for a Hardees to occupy the place held for years by The plain truth always hurts the Campus Restaurant. Every campus has its own Campus Restaurant.