xt7sbc3sxz5k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sbc3sxz5k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-04-25 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, April 25, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 25, 1989 1989 1989-04-25 2020 true xt7sbc3sxz5k section xt7sbc3sxz5k  

Vol. XCII. NO. 154

Established 1 894

Independent since 1 97 1

Tuesday, April 25, 1989

 

 

Hy RACHEL (‘OLVIN
Contributing Writer

Students from a Home Economics
class hope to shatter a few of the myths
about their college with a marketing
campaign they have developed for
Arby‘s restaurant.

“Most people think in the College of
Home Economics we just sit around
cooking and sewing," said Liz Kingslin.
a teaching assistant for Nutrition and
Food Science 548. “But really we have
some hot projects going on."

The class, part of the Restaurant
Management Program in the College of
Home Economics, has created a mar»
keting campaign for the Arby‘s restau»
rant on South Limestone, which started
yesterday and will continue through the
week.

As part of the campaign, Arby's will
be offering daily specials, and custom-
ers can register to win a Tandy 1000 HX
Computer, a ten-speed bicycle, beverr

 

Jabier Conejo. a marketing senior. displays the marketing
campaign recently completed for a local Arby‘s restau~

UK Home Economics class creates
campaign for local establishment

age coolers, Arby's sweatshirts and free
lunch for a year,

Groups of students in the class com-
bined their ideas to create the market-
ing strategy for Arby‘s.

The giveaways are being advertised
on Arby's tray liners, Banners in the
store show how UK and Arby's are
“working together to make the wildcat
difference "

“It's like an outcf—school celebration
for students," said Richard Frommey
er, a student in the class

Seventy-five to 90 percent of the cus-
tomers at the Arby‘s on South Lime»
stone are students, faculty, and staff of
CK, according to Kingslin

(letting students to create the Cam
palgn gave Arby's “inexpensive adver-
tising while we (the classi got handsoii
experience.“ said Kingslin.

The students had a hypothetical bud—
get of $2,000 to work with, and the actur
al campaign cost to Arby's is about that
much The main expenses of the project

rant. Conejo is part of the UK home economics class
that created the campaign

sieve SANDERS Kernel sum

 

are the paper tray liners. and crew ll]
centives, such as concert tickets or gift
certificates to grocery stores The
prizes for the drawing were donated

Amanda Holt, Arby's trade area mar
keting supervisor, came to Lexmgton
from Atlanta to ask the College of Busi
ness and Economics if they would cre
ate a marketing campaign geared to
wards students

The restaurant management students
take a lot of management and market
ing classes through the Business and
Economics College

Most of the students work in local res
tauraiils and some of them work at The
"Lemon Tree," a lunch restaurant lll
Eriksoii Hall operated entirely by stu
dents

“We "Arby'si really got what we
wanted," Holt \ultl "We will definitely
work With other campuses on \llllllill‘
projects They 't'K haye a really good
program and we will continue to use
theirideas '

 

Judge to allow physical evidence in trial if

Associated Press

FRANKFUR'I‘, Ky, Attorneys for five
men charged with raping a woman iii a
Kentucky State University dormitory said
yesterday they had evidence the woman
engaged in sex with another person shortly
before she allegedly was attacked in the
same room.

The evidence is important, the attorneys
said, because the woman denied having
sex at the time of the alleged attack with
anyone other than the defendants.

Prosecutors disputed the defense theory,
saying the first alleged sex act occurred
hours earlier and could not, under the
Rape Shield Law, be used as evidence.

Franklin Circuit Judge William Graham
said he would allow the evidence
testimony as well as physical evidence to
be weighed by the jury.

Commonwealth's Attorney Morris Bur~

ton and his assistant, Larry Cleveland. arr
gued strenuously against it, but declined to
delay the trial by appealing Graham‘s rul~
ing

The defendants are Mekel Blackwell and
James Price, both 19, and Richard Renix,
18, all of Memphis, Tenn , Bobby Jones,
19, of Bamberg. SC., and Myles
Hendricks, 19, of Fort Knox.

All were students at the university at the
time of the alleged incident Sept. 11 and all
but Hendricks were members of the foot
ball team Jones and Hendricks withdrew
from school in February and March. re
spectively

The five, also charged by at Franklin
County grand jury with sodomy and unlawr
ful imprisonment, pleaded innocent and
claimed the alleged victim was a willing
participant.

The crucial defense evidence apparently
will be the testimony of student Allan

Marshall, buttressed by laboratory test re
sults, that he had sex with the woman
shortly before the in e defendants did

It was discussed ill .2 hearing with ilra
ham outside the coui‘trooiii before iury se
lection began

Jail Waddell. a loiiisyillc attorney de
fending Blackwell said tests confirmed tfie
presence on the bed sheets and the man
an's clothing of s't'llle‘t] of Marshall's blood
type 8. None of the defendants is type R.
Waddell said

Robert Bowman ii Frankfort attorney
defending Hendricks. and \larsball would
testify that he was xizih the woman ‘no
more than an houi tieiore the alleged at
tack

“This goes directly to the woman s cred
ibility,” Bowman said

Burton and Cleveland howeyei‘, said
Marshall's part came a matter of hours"
earlier

Med school gets
nearly $5 million

to study breathing

By BETH TON“
Staff Writer

The UK College of Medicine has received
a grant for nearly $5 million from the Na»
tional Heart, Lung and Blood institute of
Health «NIH: to study sensory mech—
anisms involved in breathing.

Dr Donald T Frazier, professor and
chairman of the department of physiology
and biophysics. will direct the five-year
multidisciplinary research program This
research will involve the School of
Biological SCiences. biomedical engi-
neering and the College of Pharmacy

“As a team we are taking a mullltlISClr
plinarv approach meaning that we are
going to combine people from different dis-
ciplines With different talents and different
expertise to actually work on a common
problem. ' Framer said

The goals of the research are to gather
more information about how the central
nerxous system controls breathing and use
the information to improve the treatment
of respiratory disorders such as sleep
apnea. sudden :nfant 'leath sy'lltli'lllllt‘
asthma, bronchitis tii'ack lung,
emphysema and tilllt'i‘s

"Hopefully within this Hme frame .U‘
will find out a lot more about the various
muscle groups and the various areas of 'fie
body which might 'ie sensing and sending
inioriiiatioii to the brain, ' Frazier \illtl

The research program involves six spe
cific projects designed to study the physwl-
ogical and pharmacological mechanisms
involved in the act of breathing

l)rs Framer, F W Zechman and W R
Hevelette s project w'ill study the dia-
phragm and the sensory receptors role in
the control of breathing Drs Revelette.
Robin (lilmore and Zechman s pmject nvill
provide insight .nto the sensations asso
ciated With shortness of breath

l)r l.u-Yuan Lee Will examine the role of
the nervous system in protecting the lungs
against inhaled irritants Dr Dexter F
Speck tvill deterrriitie the brain areas and
pathways 'hat receive and ~iitegrate infrir
matioii sent by 'he respiratory sensors
'.\'lllCh is an important first step toward un
derstanding the generation and regulation
of respiration

Dr Michael S Dekin .y'ill examine how
brain chemicals affect the activity of indi-
u'idual nerve cells E riderstanding now
these chemicals work may help in the de
‘xelopinent of drugs