The BG News April 18, 1978

The BG News April 18, 1978

Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 4-18-1978 The BG News April 18, 1978 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 18, 1978" (1978). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3482. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3482 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Crunch If you want to send a letter to 1108 E. Wooster St., don't. The house is gone. Excavators yesterday demolished the structure, which stood just west of the University Lutheran Chapel and once served the congregation as a parsonage. The house had been vacant for almost two years and needed a great deal of roof, furnace, plumbing and insulation repairs. "It needed more repairs than anyone wanted to give. And it was an eyesore," the Rev. Larry Harris, pastor at the Lutheran Chapel, said. MEMBERS OF the chapel had removed most of the furnishings- doors, outlet covers, windows, hot water heater, bath tub, kitchen cupboards, floor register covers, television antenna, ceiling panels and, of course, the kitchen sink. The salvaged items will be sold later this quarter at a garage sale, if a garage is found. The project, which began about 10 a.m. and lasted throughout the day, attracted about 50 persons who watched from the chapel lawn, as well as dozens of residents of Rodgers Quad, who watched from their rooms. Several bystanders took pictures, some read books, a couple sunbathed and one wrote an article while the house was systematically knocked down and loaded into dump trucks. Harris said the newly vacant lot will be seeded with grass and even- Newsphoto by Larry Kayser tually may be a picnic area. The Smews Vol. 61, No. 87 Bowling 'Green 'Stale University Tuesday, April 18, 1978 State of University speech presented to trustees By Jane Musgrave tatives from University Police sur- to fund the $1 million project. Moore increase, Moore said. HE PREDICTED that next year's designed to attract nationally or in- Staff Reporter veyed the campus to recommend areas said that the precipitator will be in- MOORE ANNOUNCED the ap- enrollment will be the same as this ternationally prominent minority ar- where lighting should be restored, stalled by summer, 1979. pointment of Dr. Dwight F. Burlingame year's. The University has received tists to the University, he said. University President Hollis A. Moore Moore said. Their suggestions are as Library director. Burlingame is 15,402 pre-enrollment registrations, 46 The artists will teach specialty Jr.'s opening remarks at last week's being heeded, Moore said. THE BOARD of regents also said that dean of learning resources at the more than were enrolled at the same courses, conduct workshops, or direct Board of Trustees meeting closely it will receive a $283,000 grant to University of Evansville in Evansville, time last year. and perform, Moore explained. resembled a U.S. president's "State of BECAUSE OF high energy cost, remove architectural barriers, Moore Illinois. He will assume the position Moore also noted the "drastic in- He commended the University the Union" message. Moore stressed that the University said. Last year, {800,000 was spent on Julyl. crease" in the number application and hockey team for bringing "con- In his "State of the University" "cannot afford to abandon energy University improvements mandated by An announcement of a new director admission requests for masters degree siderable honor and recognition" to the address, Moore touched upon such conservation measures." University the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Moore of Campus Security and Safety soon program in the College of Business. University. The team is third in the points as energy conservation, utility bills were more than $350,000 this said. will be made, Moore said. The three He attributed the increased interest nation as a result of its efforts at the classified employees' pay increases, year, he said. He said that the board told him that finalists recommended by the to a grant the University received from NCAA Championships held in Rhode new staff appointments, enrollment, Moore said he has instructed the University soon may receive more screening committee will be in- IBM in 1976 to establish a Management Island during spring break. grade inflation and compliance with Charles L. Codding, director of the financial assistance. terviewed on campus within the next Information Systems Institute. The Moore ended his remarks by in- federal environmental standards. University Physical Plant, to continue Moore also gave University support two to three weeks, he added. program has been under the direction troducing Richard Usmillen, a senior in The University has adopted a investigating ways to cut University to legislation pending in the Ohio Moore reported that the trend of Dr. Steven Mandell, assistant the College of Education. Usmiller, has "safety-first" policy concerning energy energy usage. Statehouse concerning civil service pay toward declining grade point averages, professor of quantitative analysis and received the Board of Trustees conservation, Moore said. Moore reported that progress has increase. which began five years ago, continues. controls (QAC). Scholarship for the last two years. been made in resolving differences The average grade point last quarter "I thought the members of this THERE WAS a marked reduction in between the U.S. Environmental MOORE CALLED the present pay was 2.73, Moore said. ANOTHER UNIVERSITY program Board of Trustees might like to see energy consumption for last month as Protection Agency (EPA) and the system "stifling". While urging the "This decline implies some that Moore highlighted concerned the what a trustee scholar with a perfect 4.0 compared to March, 1977, even though University. law's passage, Moore said that the tightening of grading standards," visiting minority faculty program. The grade point average looks like," Moore it was much colder in March than it was proposal is insufficient. Moore said. program began this quarter and is said. at the same time a year ago, Moore THE EPA AGREED to modify its "The pending legislation does not reported. He attributed the decline to sulfur dioxide emission standards, provide increases sufficient to keep up "voluntary conservation measures." enabling the University to continue with the marketplace, nor does it Although energy conservation will operations without having to make provide for cost of living adjustments. continue much of the outside lighting "extensive and expensive" alterations, At present, 61 percent of our classified Salary hike approved that was turned off during winter will Moore said. employees have reached the last step of be restored, Moore said. But the EPA refused to change its their respective pay scales and can look By Jane Musgrave distributed1 salary increases, Moore that setting fees without hearing "With the advent of spring, and as particulant emissions standards, forward to no pay increments unless Staff Reporter said he will review their decisions and faculty recommendations "would be trees and shrubs begin to leaf, much of Moore said. the legislature acts," Moore said. look for evidence of discriminatory pay analogous to trying 12 people for a the natural light which has brightened To comply with those regulations, As the legislation stands employees University faculty and contract staff hikes. crime and convicting half of them the campus will be lost," Moore ex- the University must install an elec- earning less than $10,000 a year would will not receive across-the-board salary without hearing any evidence as to plained.d trostatic precipitator at the heating receive a raise of 40 cents an hour. increases this year as a result of a plan MOORE SAID he doubts this will which ones actually committed the At the beginning of this quarter, a plant, Moore said. The Ohio Board of Those earning between $10,000 and approved at last Thursday's Board of happen because "departments are well crime and which one's didn't." team of technicians and represen- Regents and the Ohio EPA have agreed $20,000 would receive a 20 cent an hour Trustees meeting. informed of the procedures and Newman also noted that when the Salary increases will be determined criteria." $1.3 million salary increase is divided, by individual departments, where the He said he will determine if the plan faculty members will, at most, receive determination best can be made, ac- will be continued after he reviews the only 6.5 percent increases. He ex- Bomb scare hits Union cording to University President Hollis decisions. plained that the faculty had requested A. MooreJr.,who presented the plan. Before presenting his plan to the 11 percent pay hikes. A bomb threat Saturday night in the 9:28 p.m. and said that a bomb was set AFTER RECEIVING the call, police The board approved a $1.3 million trustees for approval, Moore said he "Let me point out that by approving University Union led to the evacuation to go off in the Union at 10 p.m. said that they conducted a bomb senrch faculty and staff increase. This money contacted various faculty members for a rate hike for Blue Cross and John of about 180 persons, according to in the Union but found no trace of ex- will be divided proportionately among their reactions to the proposal. He said Hancock or a rate hike for our utilities Richard R. Stoner, director of auxiliary The caller gave no clues about the plosive devices.

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