The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 11, 1986 -Page 3" k~t k y .$ Ex-building director sues 'U' .4 By MELISSA BIRKS A former University employee was back in Federal District Court yesterday presenting the same race discrimination suit against the Univer- sity that was thrown out of court in 1980. Sixty-three-year-old Mildred Morris, the former director of Stockwell Hall, is suing the University for wages she did not receive since she was fired in 1977, and compensation for mental anguish and humiliation. She also is requesting that she be reinstated in her position. The University contends Morris was fired for in- competence and insubordination. Morris claims discrimination began when she was transferred from director of Oxford Housing to Stockwell in 1974. In response to the move, she filed a civil rightsgrievance with the University and as a result "a lot of things happened to her," said her attorney, James McGinnis. IN THE STOCKWELL position, Morris was singled out and ordered not to make carbon copies of anything without an administrator's approval; her boss Kathleen Beauvais made a secret file on her; and she was ordered to submit agendas for Stockwell meetings to her superiors for approval, McGinnis said. But University attorney Robert Vercruysse said 'When you consider the fact that she didn't know her son was working at the desk and then her son testifies that he would say hi to his mom every day, I don't think that she's a very reliable witness.' - Robert Vercruysse University attorney the only thing that led to Morris' termination was poor job performance. "She didn't do a good job as housing director," he said, citing reports that Morris was late to meetings and in getting out reapplication forms to students, and that she violated the University's. nepotism policy by hiring her son as a Stockwell desk clerk. "WHEN YOU consider the fact that she didn't know her son was working at the desk and then her -m, son testifies that he would say 'hi' to his mom every day, I don't think that she's a very reliable witness," Vercruysse said. After Morris was fired, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ruled that she could sue the University under the employment discrimination section of the Civil Rights Act. Before filing a suit, Morris attempted to recon- cile with the University by making an appoin- tment with University President Harold Shapiro. A University attorney canceled the meeting. "I was forced to file at that point," Morris said. But the case Morris filed in 1980 was thrown out--, of court before going to trial by Federal District Judge John Feikens, who did not think Morris had a case. In 1982 Morris won an appeal for a rehearing and her case was reinstated in the Federal: District Court. Judge Feikens agreed to hear the'. trial, which finally began last week. Morris will rest her case today after five days of- cross-examination by the University while the judge hears the University's side. Spring cleaning Rob Fischer prepares the fountain operation later this month., Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON outside of the Burton Tower for Congress weakens gun From AP and UPI control advocates won their own vic- Cong WASHINGTON - The House voted tory when lawmakers crushed, on a natio overwhelmingly yesterday to weaken 233-184 vote, a measure to allow the "cop the gun control law that was passed in interstate sale of handguns and, in a HE 1968 after the assassinations of Robert voice vote, banned sales of machine disag Kennedy and Martin Luther King guns. sport Jr., but retained a ban on interstate Hubert Williams, director of the tioni handgun sales. Police Foundation, said the House tions The vote came after hundreds of vote on handguns was a "major of g uniformed policemen roamed the defeat for the NRA" that "rips the tions Capitol as lobbyists, heart out" of the bill. Police officers Bu In a victory for the National Rifle spent days walking the halls of the C Association, lawmakers voted 292-130 to ease the nation's gun law, which the h mnvrl o asr obaonsnunanawhWe he Universityof Midh powerful lobby group argued unfairlyofM c penalized"hunters, sportsmen, andgun Iceof dealers. THE SENATE, which passed a billia last year to allow interstate handgun ((d'' sales and ease other controls, can ac- .iid cept the House bill or insist on a House-Senate conference. 2011 Student Activities Building For weeks, the legislation produced high drama, climaxing with police from 21 states arriving in uniform to To ensure consideration for finan confront the experienced lobbying must submit their application ma eas ratonm ndt National Rifle received by the Office of Financia NRA chief lobbyist Wayne LaPierre to ACT by pointed to the bill's lifting of an inter- TUES state sales ban for rifles and shotguns and federal guarantees that all lawfully held weapons canbetaken- *University Grant, Michigan Opportunit unloaded and inaccessible - across Study, National Direct Student Loan, Ht state lines. Guaranteed Student Loans or Pell Gran THE NRA also approves, he said, of provisions that would make it more OFFICE HOURS: difficult to prosecute unintentional O gun law violations, allow dealers to Mon.- Fri. 8:15-11:45 and 1:00-4:00 transfer guns from inventories to Thurs. 10:00-11:45 and 1:00-4:00 their private collections, and force the government to return seized weapons after an acquittal. But police groups and other gun d. .5 ." A - ;ress to talk against easing the in's gun laws, saying the bill was killer" legislation. SAID police officers strongly greed with the interstate tran- tation provisions, with a reduc- in the number of federal inspec- of gun dealers and the transfer uns to dealers' private collec- s. t John Snyder, chief lobbyist of Citizens Committee for the Right Wigan control legislation FALL & WINTER 1986-87 APPLICATION DEADLINE TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1986 to Keep and Bear Arms called the" vote "an historic victory for America's tens of millions of law- abiding gun owners, a smashing suc- cess for a genuine people's lobby." "The vote signifies a beginning shift in congressional attitudes on a whole range of issues associated -with the right of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms for legitimate purposes." Tram may zip through A2 (Continued from Page 1) years, and in 1985 covered 3,686,000,000 miles and carried more But Collins said Ann Arbor officials than 29.5 million passengers without a will study all aspects of the trains single accident. before approving plans for an Ann The French TGV (Tres Grande Arbor stop. He cited the speed of the Vitesse) trains travel in excess of 150 trains as a possible safety concern_,. kph and cover more than 120,000 The high speed rail system would be kilometers each day, and the modeled after those already Shinkansen Bullet Train has carried operating in other parts of the world.j more than 2 billion passengers in 12 The British HST (High Speed Train) ,, years. Neither train system has ever has been in operation for more than 15 had an accident. TNI- LIST appears in Weekend magazine every Friday. p. cial aid* for the coming school year, continuing students aterials by the priority deadline. 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