The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 25, 1987- Page 3 Fast food king pays college Sbills DETROIT (AP) - When Herb Schervish, owner of two Burger king franchises, found his employees turning over as fast as burgers on a grill, he came up with a way to per- suade them to stay- pay their col- lege tuition. Turnover at his two Detroit area restaurants, one in the downtown Renaissance Center and the other at Fairlane Town Center in Dearborn, has dropped from 300 percent n 1986 to 40 percent in January-June 1987. "We've found other problems such as (employee) tardiness or ab- senteeism have dropped off as well," said Robert Kopecky of Henry Ford Community College's management development division, who helped create the program. So far, 40 of Schervish's 100 employees have taken him up on the offer. The workers attend Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn, with the option of transferring to a four-year school. Participants must be high school graduates, maintain at least a C average, and continue to work at his restaurant. Each employee also is required to take five management courses at Henry Ford. "There's great competition in terms of starting wage, but there is only so much you can pay to stay profitable...so you find other ways to maintain employees," Burger King spokesperson Tony Garel- Frantzen said in Miami. Garel-Frantzen said Schervish is the only Burger King franchisee he knows of offering such a program. All crew members at company owned Burger King restaurants are eligible to participate in a tuition reimbursement program, he said. Otherwise, he said, the company offers guidelines to individual fran- chise owners on providing education assistance programs for restaurant workers. Participating members offer workers scholarships or tuition re- imbursement. Wendy's and McDonalds said they offer owners similar guidelines and give them the option whether to take part. 'U' will be base for network of supercomputers By RYAN TUTAK The supercomputers - at San The University will be the site of Diego, Boulder, Pittsburgh, a multi-million dollar project that Princeton University, Cornell will enable researchers at research University, and the University of centers around the country to share Illinois - are used to process and information faster. analyze data. The NSF network The National Science Foundation (NSFNET) will allow researchers to (NSF) will fund a five-year, $14 transmit their data to other million project to connect six supercomputers. Currently, only supercomputer sites and seven researchers at the supercomputers regional centers across the country. could use them. The Merit Computer Network on The regional centers, like the North Campus, which links University, are junctions to the computer systems at Michigan's supercomputers for other eight public universities, will institutions. coordinate the system. The network will also increase The long-distance telephone the speed of transmitting company MCI, IBM, and the State information. The equivalent of 50 of Michigan will also contribute a pages of text will be transferred in combined $5 million to the national one second. network, which Gov. James Blanchard announced yesterday "We're tying everything together during a press conference at Wayne mg a high-performance network,"said State University. Doug van Houweling, Merit board The $14 million will go toward chair and the University's vice- the staffing of up to 30 employees provost for Information Technology. and two IBM mainframe computers IBM will develop and provide at Merit. software and hardware for NSFNET This award is a significant to transfer data from one achievement in NSF's leadership of this important national enterprise," supercomputer to another. MCI will said NSF's Deputy Director John connect the supercomputers through Moore. land and radio circuits. Cubanintmates free one hostage Daily Photo by SCOTT ITUCHY On hold LSA senior Jeannie Storer uses both phones at the CRISP problem desk to try to straighten our her financial hold credit while LSA junior Trevor Thrall waits. Ford disinvests from Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Ford Motor Co., one of the biggest U.S. companies in South Africa, has agreed to disinvest from the country but will still sell vehicles here, officials said yesterday. Ford has a 42 percent interest in the South African Motor Corp., known as SAMCOR. The giant U.S. automaker will donate 24 percent to SAMCOR employees and sell the remaining 18 percent to the Anglo American Corp. and its subsidiaries, Anglo said in a statement. Under the arrangement, Anglo American will now control 76 percent of SAMCOR, and company employees will hold the remaining 24 percent in a trust fund. However, Ford will assist SAMCOR and continue to sell its products in South Africa, the Anglo Statement said. Ford will still supply SAMCOR with vehicles, parts, management,and technical assistance and allow SAMCOR to use the Ford trademark, the statement added. "Ford will continue to be involved very heavily in supporting SAMCOR," said Anglo official Leslie Boyd. "South Africans will be able to continue to but Ford products in this country." Anglo spokesperson James Duncan declined to say how much the deal was worth, and Ford officials could not immediately be reached for comment. Duncan described the deal as an "innovative licensing agreement" between Ford and SAMCOR. The employee trust will be administered by workers elected by their peers, Anglo said. Dividends from the trust will be used for community projects, the company added. ATLANTA (AP) - Rebellious Cubans freed one hostage yesterday but held on to more than 100 others at federal prisons in Atlanta and Oakdale, La., spurning offers of a case-by-case review of threatened de- portations with shows of defiance and crude weapons. A prison guard who suffered from high blood pressure was released by inmates at the U.S. Penitentiary in Atlanta, said Warden Joseph Petro- vsky, adding that 75 hostages were still held. He said one inmate had been killed in the rebellion. Negotiations at both facilities continued intermittently, Michael Quinlan, director of the Bureau of Prisons, said in a statement issued in Washington. "Our No.1 priority is the welfare of those being held against their will," Quinlan said. "The negotiating team since 7:15 last night has been dealing with at least 12 leaders or groups of leaders," Petrovsky said, adding that the in- mates were not accepting an offer by Attorney General Edwin Meese of a case-by-case review. "As long as the hostages are not being injured, and as long as we're making headway, we're going to ne- gotiate this thing out," Petrovsky said. He said 315 inmates had sur- rendered since the takeover began Monday morning. Inmates of the Oakdale Federal Detention Center in Louisiana, who took over the facility on Saturday, brought two of their 28 hostages to a gate yesterday to show that they were being well-treated. Warden J.R. Johnson called that a "positive sign," but the Louisiana inmates brandished crude weapons and continued to demand their free- dom, "Liberty or die," said one slo- gan painted in the yard. MSA officials dispute condom machines By LISA POLLAK The chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's health issues committee met with opposition from the assembly last night when he took a stand against the installation of condom vending machines on campus. MSA passed no formal resolution for or against the machines at their weekly meeting, but vice president Wendy Sharp anticipated assembly action after further research on the issue. "I don't think the machines would benefit students," said health issues committee chair Dennis Lopez, a student in the School of Public Health. Lopez said vended condoms are more expensive and of poorer quality than store-bought condoms. The vended condoms - unlike those obtained free at University Health Services - do not come with educational literature, he added. But some assembly members said the machines would offer a convenient way to obtain condoms without embarrassment and thus encourage condom use. "If you're in a dorm and it's two in the morning... chances are you're not going to go to Kroger to buy condoms. They aren't going to be AMPU 0 HAPPY "o^o RT HANKSGiVING N readily available," Sharp said. "But our committee felt that, with all the access students have to get condoms at U of M, vending machines aren't going to change anything," Lopez countered. Fouzia Kiani, head of the Residence Hall Association, supported the condom vending machines - despite a University rule that forbids premarital sexual intercourse inside residence halls. "Before the administration is going to agree to put condom machines in the residence halls, they're going to have to change that rule," said Mike Phillips, chair of MSA's Student Rights Committee. ~ Eugene Ingram, director o f University Purchasing and Stores, told Lopez this month that without student pressure, the administration would never approve the purchase of condom vending machines on campus. The machines have already been installed at schools across the country, including Amherst, Columbia, Arizona State, and Michigan Tech. Although the assembly asked Lopez to research the machines, his committee's opinions do not have to reflect MSA's final decision, Sharp said. r------------- , !i ;: G iI u Ii I i I i, 1 i , ,, TIME FOR A RESUME Ve know it's a busV time for you - Time to celebrate. time to reflect. But it's also time to look to the future. Kinko's can help you prepare for your future. We have a wide range of specialty papers and matching envelopes to give your resume the professional look it deserves. Great copies. Great people. 540 E. Liberty 1220 S. University Open 24 Hours Open 24 Hours 761-4534 747-9020 - - --------- -- - ----------- --I Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Fowl play Kroger meat clerk Gayle Kiest stocks the turkey freezer. Kroger sells over 1,500 turkeys during the week of Thanksgiving, she said. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today 1 i 1 1 1 acauley's ncrth SCHOOL SUPPLIES 1 1 'I 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 I I Campus Cinema: night features twelve stand-up I I I