xt71rn305m1h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71rn305m1h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-10-30 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 30, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 30, 1978 1978 1978-10-30 2020 true xt71rn305m1h section xt71rn305m1h KENTUCKY
Kc  

an independent student newspaper

2] University of Kentucky

Lexington. Kentucky

 

Hold 'm back

By DEBBIE McDANIEL
Copy Editor

The Senate Council postponed
action Friday on establishing a UK
Gerontology (concerned with the
elderly and aging processes) Center
after hearing a senate committee
report of a “lack of unanimity”
among key adminstrators who
planned the proposal.

Prof. Jesse Harris, chairman of
the senate committee on academic
organization and structure, reported
to the Senate Council that the
committee contacted 12 involved
administrators.

“Gena-ally all of the persons
involved are supportative of this
proposal," Harris said, bu added
thatt they disagreed on placing the
Council on Aging and the Donovan
Scholar program unthr the center
until it is established

Inits Oct. 27 report, the committee
said testimony in its interviews
showed policies it Washiigon for
turning gerontology centers are
under review and may chap.

The report concluded “It could be
detrimerlal to the Council on Aging
to have it transferred into the Center
before the Center has a Director,
and established policy, and assured
fuming"

Harris said although the com-
mittee was told thl including the
Councl on Agingwith the carter was
eaential for the program’s funding,

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uncil postpone

his committee favored placing the
Council under the program later —
unless there was assurance from
Washington that it was essential.

Harris said his committee
recommended approval of the
center with three modifications.

The first is to clearly state that the
center cannot initiate courses, but
can only coordinate them, because
the center’s staff consists of ad-
ministrators, not teachers.

The second modification
suggested expandng the center’s
Advisory Council to include the
Dean of the College of Social
Professions The expanded council
will comist of the vice president for
academic affairs, vice president of
the Medical Center, two deans from
the College of Arts and Sciences, the
dean of the College of Medicine and
the dean of the Graduate School and
coordinator for research.

The dean of the Gradmte School
would serve as Advisory Council
Chairman, and the center’s director
would rise act as director (1 the
Santbrs—Brown Center.

The third modification recom-
mench the continued separation of
the Gerontology Center and the
Council on Aging, until the program
is funded and has a director.

The three functions of the cater
are research. teaching, and service.
All are now hmded by septate
depttments on a limited basis. The
aimofthecaiterwillbeaicoor-

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UK team examines
McDonald’s in. Ohio

By JACK WAINWRIGHT
Staff Writer

A delegation of UK officials
traveled to Ohio last Thursday to
study the operation d McDonald’s
restuarants at college campuses in
that state.

The trip was sponsored by the
national restuarant chain in an
effort to convince the University to
place a franchise in the UK student
center, in place of the present Grill.

Among the UK group were Jack
Blanton, vice president of business
affairs, Dean of Students Joe Burch,
Food Services Director Allen
Rieman, and representatives from
Student Government and the
Student Center Board.

A McDonald’s is already being

, constructed near UK, on Limestone

at the site where a Jerry’s
restuarant used to be. The UK
branch would not be a subsudiary
operation of that restuarant, said
Ronald Long, vice president of
McDonald’s Columbus region.

“We would rather have us as our
competition," said Long. “We would
get students in this (campus)
operation and people off the street
from the one on Lime," he said.

According to Long, the franchise
fee for a McDonald’s would be ap-
proximately $225,000 to $230,000.
“The franchise for the student
center might be given to the same
person who purchased the
Limestone franchise,” he said.
Plans for who would hold a UK
franchise are indefinite, and the
store could be wholly owned by the

company.

The trip traveled via one of a fleet
of 20 btses owned by the company.
Called the “Big Mac,” it was a blue
and white customized Greyhound,
estimated to cost $250,000.

The University of Cindnnati’s
McDonald’s was the first stop on the
trip, as well as the first campts

. operation visited.

3' campus

There are certain between
and non-campus
restuarants. According to branch

I ‘ manager Mike Henser, a breakfast
menu is not served at UC. ”We tried
‘_ a breakfast mew when we first

opened, but foundthat most students
are not on campts at that time,”
Henser said. ,

“We serve an average of between

' 3,000 and 4,000 students daily,” he

dinate courses to educate and train
students for careers in Gerontology,
to develop services for the elderly,
and to undertake research on aging.

According to the proposal, the
research mission of the cutter would
focus on biological and health
aspects of aging, causes and effects
of aging, the aging pocess at the
clinical and bmic science level, and
study how to retard the aging
process.

A planning committee and
development committee have been

said. Henser said that the yearly

established with a oneyear $25,000
planning grant and a $135,000 two-
year development grant, both from
the Administration on Aging, Three
coordinators, one each for research,
reaching, and service, have bear
selected. Each coordinator has a
committee of four to seven faculty
members working in the particular
area.

Research would be condmted by
UK faculty, research associates and
staff. It would be supported through
grants and other extramural fun~

gross is between $600,000 and
$700,000. According to Larry
Essalnger, director of the Student
Union at UC, the university receives
6 percent off the top of the gross

According to Long, the em-
ployment ratio for campus
operationsis 00 percent students and

.20 percent ,non-students. “The 20

percent is necessary to ac-
commodate the summer transition
months," Long added. Henser said

that there is a high turnover in
student workers.
Greg Marsh, director of real

estate for McDonald’s, said that the
campus McDonald's are a special
program, but not a new one. “Our
big ptsh was from ’73 to ’74,” he
said. “Now there is a new interest as
well as new markets, Marsh added
Marsh said that one d‘ the new
markets is in high school cafeterias.
“For a little over a year we’ve
operated a McDonald's in a hth
school in Arkansas,” he said. Ac-
cording to Long the operation is not
completely controlled by Mc-
Donald’s because of pressure from

parents.
Continued on page 3

For traveling the roads
in style and comfort,
try a really BIG Big’Mac

By JACK WAINWRIGHT
Staff Writer

University officals were searching
far and wide Thursday for the
elusive “Big Mac." Their search
lead them down lonely interstates,
through northern Kentucky to Ohio
and back again.

The search, however, was not
totally amid the hardships normally
associated with such a journey. A
larger, non-edible, mobile Big Mac
provided the comfort and the en-
tertainment that made this a fan-
tastic journey.

UK officials and students climbed
aboard this big Big Mac at 8 am. It’s
a bus, a vehicle that is as whimsical
as anything ever created by Walt
Disney.

The company host traveled in a
separate car, leaving the UK guests
alone in the Big Mac his. The Mc-
Donald’s spokesman would drive on
ahead to rejoin the party in
Florence, Ky., andin the meantime,
the guests could marvel at their
accommodations.

Leaving the guests alone also
provided for a relaxed atmosphere
to make the journey easier to bear,
and for guests to consider the sales
pitch.

The his left little to he desired in
motorized splentbr. Appropriately
decorated in blue and white, in-

ding obtained through the center.

The teaching componait would
coordinate a series of new
University-wide courses including
Interdisciplinary Survey of
Gerontology, Social-Psychological
Aspects of Aging, and the Biology of
Aging. Upper division un-
dergraduates and graduate students
could take these courses.

According to the proposal, the
development grant expired on Sept.
30, 1978. However, the University is

cluding the upholstery,” the walls
were white formica with light wood
trim.

Two couches with tables and eight
swivel seats provided the guests
with comfortable, elegant seating
In the middle of the hrs, a couch ran
along the right side with five small
pillows to accommodate nap-takers.

Both tables were complemented
with cup holders and ashtrays, as
were all chairs and couch arms. In
two of the ashtrays, fresh decks of
playing cards were provided for
solitaire and poker like a gambling
riverboat.

Two silver dishes with ornamental
covers were perched on a center
table for snacks or fillers between
drinks. The table also served as a
disguise for a video cassette
recorder and for cassettes hidden
away in cabinets.

Perched in the corner was a Sony
Trinitron color television elegantly
cushioned in black vinyl. Controlled
from the driver’s seat, the television
and recorder were an ultimate in
television technology and viewing
luxury.

In front of the bus at the driver’s
side was a stylish mobile telephone
with digital pinch dialing on the
outside of the receiver. The phone
could connect the bus with Mc-
Donald’s operatives all over the
world.

Continued on page 3

8 action on gerontology center

eligible to apply for an AOA
Multidisciplinary Implanentation
Grant which could provide forallor
part of the salaries of the core staff
(director, deptty director, staff
associate and secretary) for a two-
year paiod

The Senate Council plead a
motion to ask the propam’s
originators to respond to the
reservations expressed by the
committee. The item will realm to
the council’s Nov. 3 agaida for
action. _

 

~today

 

nation

THE TERROR 0F NAZISM revisted a thater
director whose family died in concentration camps
as 10 marauders ripped apart a theater showing
what they said was a “pro-Nazi" film.

Jack Garfein. artistic director of the Harold
Klurman Theater, and about 50 people in the
audience stood by horrified as the intruders
destroyed a movie projector and stage sets
Saturday night in the theater on Manhattan's West
Side. One pcson was inbred slightly.

world

PRIME MINISTER IAN SMITH. who seven
months ago agreed to black-majority rule fa
Rhodesiabytheendof theyear, saidSunthyhe
doubts his government can meet that deadline fa-

the promised hlid-over of power.

This was Smith‘s first ptblic acknowledgment of
what had long been predicted here - that the
escalating guerrilla war would effectively rule out
holding peaceful elections in Bhodesia‘s embattled
countryside.

Smith, speaking at a news conference, said only
that the administration he heads with three black
leaders was having difficulty planning Rhodesia’s
first universal-suffrage elections, which had been
schedtled to be held by Dec. 31.

THOUSANDS OF PROTESTERS clashed with
security forces across Iran agdn Sunday, defying
the govemment‘s prohiiition against demon-
strations Officials said at least eight person were
killed.

Troops used tear gas and fired guns into the air to
disperse Want of protesters in Tehran. No
injrieswerereported.althothiotsin manyparts
of the capital lasted all day.

Military trucks, armored cars and tanks rolled

down streets leading to Tehran University, where
more than 10,000 persons gathered to demand the
resignation of the government and shout support for
exiled religious leader Ayatullah Khomeini, who is
living in Paris.

RECORD-SETTING COSMONAUTS Vladimir
Kovalenok and Alexanthr Ivmdiaiho are finishing
their scientific studies aboard the Salyis 6 space
station and preparing to return to Earth. the
Communist Party newquic Pravth reported
yesterday.

Some Western sources in Moscow speculate the
return will come Thirsday, but thus has bear no
official word.

weather

SUNNY AND A Ll1'I'LE WARNER today with
h'ghsin the mid 60s and increasing cloudinus with
a 20 pecent chmce of showers toniht. laws
ton‘ght in the mid 40s. Cloudy tornwrow with a
chmceofsbowersandh'ghsin thelowerns.

 

 

 

  
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
   
 
  
  
   
    

    

 

 

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L

Dangerous decision

It’s good news that the state
Board for Elementary and
Secondary Education voted to
appeal a recent decision that
limits state regulation of private
Christian schools.

If that decision were to go
unchallenged, it would let stand
a precedent of absolute in-
dependence for private schools,
save for standards that apply to
fire, health, safety and pupil
attendance.

The Oct. 4 decision by Franklin
Circuit Court Judge Henry Meigs
said that state regulation of the
fundamentalist Christian schools
violates parts of the Kentucky
and US. constitutions that
guarantee freedom of religion.

That decision made par-
nnanent an injunction Meigs
issued last year that restrained
the state from enforcing the
regulaton of the schools and
from prosecuting, under truancy
laws, the parents of children who
attended the schools.

Stunned by the verdict and
shocked by Meigs’ sweeping
interpretation of religious

Administrators

 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
   
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
 
  
   
  
 
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   

 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  

freedom, the Board of Education
invited the Kentucky Education

Association, the Kentucky
School Boards Association, the
Kentucky Association of School
and other
organizations to join the appeal
as “frienrk of the court.”

The board can use all the help
it can get in the case, because it
involves a fundamental dif-.
ferenoe in opinions on education
and constitutional freedoms, and
could eventually reach the US.
Supreme Court.

The fudamentalist schools,
and apparently Meigs as well,
seek to make an issue where
there is none. They argue that
freedom of religion is being
abridged by state regulation. In
fact, state authorities have
always gone to great lengths to
see that religious schools are
permitted to teach their own
interpretions on subjects like the
Creation and evolution.

But the predominant part of
instruction is a secular matter.

There are no variations from be used in a classroom, as was
religion to religion on how to the issue in this case.

multiply or divide, or on how to
read or write grammatically. In

these areas, thee isavalid need can be restrained to secular
for state standards regarding matters, as they have been in the
which textbooks are qualified to past. No one will deny the right

on private schools must be overturned

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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in

1%:

of parents to raise their children
according to the parents’

religion; but no one should deny creation of
“schools” that meet no stan-

least meets minimal standards dards whatsoever, other than
in areas that are distinctly non- serving as a device to allow

State edmational standards the children an education that at

religious.

parents to vent their frustration

 

 

Also, if Meigs decision is

allowed to stand, it will invite the

impromptu

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at the government. Depriving
children of a decent education
for political reasons is unfair and
unjust, and the unfortunate
decision that would make such
efforts possible should be blasted

off the books.

Repression in foreign countries is relevant to Lexington

By snousou ROZIER

lntemational events have been in
the news lately, and have been
emphatically brought home by the
injustice done to the anti-CIA
protestors by American justice. As
we will see American “justice”
internationally andhere at home are
the opposite sides of the same coin.

Iran, Nicaragua, South Africa —
what do all of these have to do with
students at UK? Despite the
narrowly national chauvinist at-
titudes expressed by some in the
Kernel and the racist attitude shown
toward Iranian marchers, these
three countries have much to do with
us at UK.

All three are repressive countries
that have a narrow elite willing to
use massive violence to maintain
their rule and that of their social
system. All three provide profits for
U.S.-based corporations to the
detriment of their economies
providing for their majority. All
three use US. military weapons and
in at leaast two cases U.S. advisors
to maintain their repressive rule.
This relates to us because it is the
government that supposedly
represents us that maintains this
worldwide repression.

I would like to take some time to
illustrate what is meant by US.
involvement in these countries and
how this relates to student, staff and
faculty at UK. According to US.
corporate interests and the US.
government and media that
represent it, these countries are part
if the “Free Worl " and enjoy the
support of a majority of their people.
They are opposed only by a small
fanatical minority. In the case of

Nicaragua and South Africa, the

small minority is part of the in-
ternational Communist conspiracy

— in Iran, “anti-modernizer”
Muslim fanatics. Let’s see what the
reality is.

In 1951, a popular and nationalistic
government elected Dr. Mohammed
Mossadegh prime minister. Because
of popular sentiment, Mossadegh’s
government attacked pro-monarchy

before the Vietnam war. Part of the
US. naval fleet sails the Persian
Gulf as a reminder to the Iranian
people of the US. government’s
support of the shah. Over one million
demonstrate in Tehran to call for the
overthrow of the shah, and Carter
backs the shah. The shah’s troops
kill from 4,000 to 6,000 peaceful
protestors in one day. and Mr.

 

commentary

 

dominated institutions and
nationalized several British
holdings. President Eisenhower
warned of US. displeasure at what
he called increasing communist
presence. By this he meant any
encroachment on the power of in-
ternational corporations to control
the internal affairs (oil fields) of
Iran.

The US. responded . . .
Washington flew in Gene-a1 Sch-
warzkopf who had been working to
strengthen the shah’s police before
his ouster by the Mossadegh
government. Schwarzkopf met with
the US. ambassador in Iran and
then flew to meet CIA ambfisador
Dulles. A week later the Shah had
been reinstated by a coup.

Nation magazine estimated that
the 1953 coup alone cost US. tax-
payers 619 million. In a few months
$60 million more was added to keep
the shah in power and in the next
year, the fignre rose to $127 million.

Today the US. still props up the
shah‘s government as an outpost of
US. corporate interest in the Middle
East. The US. government has
40,000 advisors in Iran nnore than

“Human Rights” Carter calls the
shah to say he supports the move for
more democracy in Iran. Needless
to say this is not in any way in our
interests at UK.

In South Africa, approximately
350 US. corporations have increased
investment over 300 percent since
1960 and control 17 percent of foreign
investment there, American
bnsiness owns 43 percent of the oil,
23 percent of the automobile market,
and 70 percent of the computer
market. American banks own nearly
onethird of all of South African bank
loans.

Election
letters

deadline

Letters to the editor concerning
candidates in the elections next
Tuesday should be delivered to
Room 114. Journalism Building.
before 5 pm. tomorrow for
verification. Letters about

 

candidates will not be accepted
after that time.

 

 

   
   
 
 

South Africa contains a major
portion of world reserves d gold,
platinum, chrome, nickel, etc. and
another important commodity for
cpaitalists — dirt cheap labor. The
average take-home pay of Black
labor is $24 less than what the South
African government says is
necesary for survial — a measley
$125 a month.

The US. capitalists know a good
deal when they see one. A GM
spokesman was quoted in the New
York Times as saying, “We’ve been
in there for fifty years, and we plan
to be there a long time.” South
Africa gets arms from the US. or its
agent, Israel, to maintain a brutal
system where a black can be shot for
being in a white area after dark or
murdered while in detention for
simply speaking out against the
conditions of the black majority.

 

Finally, that “liberal” and
“democratic” state, Israel, supplies
arms for anothe' American client in
the free world. Partly for lack of
space and not to be repititious I will
not go into thedetails of US. support
to the Somoze dictatorship in
Nicaragua.

The comections of these events to
us go beyond the moral con-
siderations that we should oppose
the US. government meddling in the
affairs of otelnr governments. The
government that is responsible for
the maintenance of the repressive
governments discussed and many
more is the same government that
serves the neerk of the corporations
at home to maximize their profits.
For us this means less real wages,
with inflation and work speedw. It
means more attempts to but our
unions like the UMWA or postal

workers and it means more
unenployment. Equality for blacks
and women will be sacrificed for
profit ratios.

This is why what the US.
government does to .the people
around the world affects us — we
share the same enemy with the rest
of the world. What they do abroad
they will do hee, witness the
repressive political trial here in
Lexington. We should unite with the
world's majority to build a humane
world without the brutal elite that
now rules in the US. and worldwide
and not be taken in by the
chauvinism expressed by a small
minority at UK.

Bronson Rosier is a member of the
Young Socialist Alliance and a UK
employee.

Letters to the editor

 

Candidate Carol Jarboe responds

I appreciate the frankness of your
editorial endorsing my opponent
\Dr. Wilkie), and I appreciate the
opportunity to reply.

Collective bargaining does not
“mean different thirngs to different
people." It means precisely one
thinng. Collective bargaining mearns
negotiations between manqement
and a spokesman for workers,
dealing with each othe' as equals, in
which each side is compelled to
compromise the interests it
represents in order to come to a
compromise agreement. In the
schools this means that the School
board must sacrfice the interests of
its constituents — the parents, the
taxpayers, the students. andtlne non-
union workers and teaches - in
order to make a deal with the union.
The rest is not meanirng, but result.
Almost always thee are the same

side effects.

For example, you say that Dr.
Broadns‘ plan elimindes three side
effects, “wehre professional
negotiators are not used, secret
meetings are banned and strikes are
prohibit " In fact: A profelional

negotiator sat at the table with the

example.) You forgot the fourth
exclusion from “educational
collective bargaining,” the
elimination of excusive retracti-
tatiorn. Again: the bargaining was
exclusive, and this was declared
illegal by the court. Finally, your
notion that the threat of “a
disastrous breakdown between
teachers and administration"
requires bargaining is the exact
oppositeoftlnetruth.Bargainknghas
brought the breakdown whicln now
exists.

There are other necesary side
effects. Tax increases are of more
than passing interest. So, too, is the
drag on teacher and Board time and
energy caused by the dominant and
divisive debates which have gone on
in thelast two years. Recall, please,

to collective bargaining editorial

views on this matter is incompetent
to serve. Dr. Wilkie is not in-
competent. And the uniorn, wlnicln
solicited, encouraged and encbrsed
his candidacy, is not so foolish as to
support an unknown quantity. You
know better than that.
“Negotiations” is a synonym for
“bargaining,” and “represen-
tative” is a euphemism for collec-
five.
I could not agree more, however,
with your view that othe' issues are
ing. That is why I don’t want to
have to talk about bargaining
anymore. But you and theI-‘CEA and
your canddate resist lettirng us pin it
behindus.Thefactthd yougiveusa
list of other issues does not hide the
fact that your eidtorial was about
collective bargaining and only

that it is the REA which has said collective bargianlng. I have views

that collective bargainaig is the only about those listed concens and
legislative issue. I believe that many others. Do you?

teaches are the single best experts

on the many edmational problens Carol Jarboe
we face; bra expeienoe hm shown Candidate. FayetteConty
us that union leaders do not and, by School Board. “District
virtue of the dernanrb of thu- role,

willnottalkaboutthaetlnkngsl (Thelteraehaaewopaperh-
propoaetostarttalkingtotoache'l trontbeU-lverslyof

FCEA. At the trial, it came out the again — about the drunken.

therewereascriesofaecret

You inanlt you carnrldde and the

meetings;andeventhonflhstrlkel FCEAbysayingthathel-“an

are illegd, hey still cal and do open mind"
happen. (Mempha, Tom, is a good bI-gainung Anyonewhoh-no firnn

about collective

Kentucky. has act editorially sq-
portedaaycaaldateforelectlflte
the Fayette M lei-ll M
ammonium
Iatertblswoek.)

 

 

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Osathasd fre- page 1

Walking to the back of the
his, one found small his well-
equipped kitchen and
restroom facilities. Two
small metal containers
yielded steaming hot coffee,
while a large metal contains
filled with ice served as a
cooler.

Contained in woodgrain
formica cabinets , were
alcohol and mixers which no
hrs of such fame should be
without. Fifth bottles of
vodka, scotch and whiskey
capped with measuring caps
were complimented by
Collins mix, tonic water and
club soda.

Plastic cocktail glasses and
coffee cups offered subtle
visible reminders of who the
benefactor was, in coun-
terpoint to the stronger pit-
ches from the company
representatives

Alone, the UK delegation
marveled at the possible use
of such a vehicle for traveling
to away games. There was a
brisk turnover in stories,
comments and quips, as Jack
Blanton and Joe Burch vied
for entertainer of the day
honors.

- In Columbus, the guests
were treated at lunch with
first-hand samples of the food

they were considering
bringing to UK. The Mc-
Donald‘s lunch was limited
only by the amount one could
hold in a single sitting.

0n the way back to
Lexington, one of the eight-
track tape players was turned
on along with a video cassette
of the second AIi-Spinks bout.
A warm, cordial glow en-
veloped the bus as mixed
drinks and Michelob were

served. and the conversation
and laughter became looser
and friendlier.

The only principals who
never showed for the journey
were Ronald McDonald and
his colleague, Mayor Mc-
Cheese, though they probably ,
could have popped out of a
cabinet or drawer at any
time. But they weren’t
needed for the pitch; “Big
Mac" did all the work.

UK officials look at Ohio
campus McDonaIdS'

Continued from page i

The next campus operation
visited was at Ohio State
University in Columbus. This
branch began operating soon
after the UC McDonald's in
1973, and is now in the fourth
year of a five year contract
with OSU.

The operation at Ohio State
University is a company-
owned store, said Long. A
spokeswoman for the branch
at the Columbus school said
that the resturant has a
yearly gross of between
$700,000 and “10,000. She also
said that the store has
sponsored various campus

activities over the past years.

According to Wendell
Ellenwood, director of the
Student Union at Ohio State,
the student cafeterias
operated by the university in
the union were done away
with. “We began to diversify
and added a Pizza liut, deli
and a yogurt and juice shop,”
he said.

Ellenwood said that there is
a close working operation
with McDonald’s. “We have
three loung
McDonald’s which we
schedule events for when
McDonalds is not using
them," he said.

Public administration program
receives $25,000 HEW grant

By STEVE MASSEY
Staff Writer

The UK Masters of Public
Administration program,
which has experienced an
increase from 19 to 77
students in just two years,
received a shot in the arm
this year with HEW’s Office

of Education sanctioning an
Education for the Public
Service grant totaling $47,000.

Designed to support and
promote education in public
service areas, the money has
been divided into two areas of
assistance — institutional
awards and fellowship
grants.

Institutional awarrb, ac- -

cording to an HEW news
release, allow colleges and
universities to improve or
establish additional plblic
service programs on the

graduate level. UK’s allot- ,

ment for institutional awards
is $24,000, leaving $23,400 for
fellowship grants.

The fellowship grants focus
on providing financial
assistance to graduate
students who plan careers in
government or in nonprofit
community service agencies.

Merlin Hackbart, director
of UK’s Public Ad
ministration program, said,
“The overall prepose (of the
HEW grant) is twofold: the
institutional portion is
designed to enhance the

are designed to attract highly
qualified graduate students
into public service areas.”

The distribution of the
institutional award funds will
probably include usage “for
additional faculty, seminars,
travel, and general program
enrichment," said Hackbart.
An example of this money
usage is the funding of the
James Martin seminar series
for MPA students.

“The general thrust is to
support and strengthen the
program that the student is
involved in,” added James
McDonald, director of the UK
Research Foundation.

With_ fellowship grants,

    

students receive a fixed sum
of $3,900. The institution also
receives $3,900 to cover
tuition, fees, and other costs

often associated with
graduate research and
supplies.

“Determination as to which
students need money is made
like any other fellowship
programs —— the students

eareasusedby

       
        

 
  

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