Feb 3issue

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THE CAMPUS

February 3, 2016 – Volume 110 Issue 15

The Man Behind the Grill

Ali Wonderly Student Publications

Willie Butler, Sodexo employee, loads a basket with fries. Butler mans the grill station in the caf during the weekends. Butler deviates from the menu, allowing students to create their own specialized meals. “I’ve been working for 37 years and this is the best job I’ve ever had,” Butler said. “I get hyped when I see that line at the gate and you see the people run toward me at the grill. It doesn’t scare me. I’m ready to roll.”

Caf worker tells of his life experiences, his love for students Sage Tokach LIFESTYLES EDITOR

Willie Butler, the weekend grill man in the caf, feels grateful for students. Butler deviates from the menu, allowing students to create their own specialized meals. He takes any requests, but for Valentine’s Day, he goes all out. “It’s my responsibility to treat you well–like a name, not a number,” Butler said. “You’re not a meal plan. You’re a person.” Butler said his background taught him how to treat people, especially women. He grew up in a house with a mother and 14 sisters who taught him “domestic chores and gentlemanly behavior.” He lives alone now, but has a lot of family, including his sisters, nieces, and students. “I know my place on the food chain: elderly, children, women, then me,” he said.

“Blood is not thicker than water. All women are my sisters, and we wouldn’t have anything without them.” After moving out of his childhood home, Butler joined the Army and served in Saudi Arabia and in Germany. He spent three years in Saudi Arabia during the ‘90s. When he returned, he said he kissed the ground. “You learn to appreciate ladies when you spend three years in Desert Storm without them,” he said. “I thank God for my ladies and for you students. Without y’all, I don’t know if I’d be here.” Butler’s 12 years of military service caused him to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression. Working at OCU has helped his spirits immensely, he said, but it has been difficult. “I haven’t been to my therapist in two and a half months,” he said. “Know why? You guys.”

It’s my responsibility to treat you well–like a name, not a number. You’re not a meal plan. You’re a person.

Willie Butler

Sodexo employee

Before joining the Sodexo staff, Butler worked in a managerial position that paid $18 an hour. He quit that job to come to OCU because this job makes him happier, he said. In the eight and a half years he has been at OCU, he has missed two days. “I’ve been working for 37 years, and this is the best job I’ve ever had,” Butler said. “I get hyped when I see that line at the gate and you see the people run toward me at the grill. It doesn’t scare me. I’m ready to roll.” Each time Butler gets a paycheck, he pays his bills and uses the rest of the money to help his nieces. He has made car payments for them and even

paid one niece’s way through college. It’s his duty to help them out with anything, he said, no questions asked. “I’m not trying to be a millionaire. I have a million dollar heart, and I need to spread it out,” he said. “You can’t put a price on happiness. I won the jackpot already, being here.” One student said she appreciates Butler’s attitude. “When I go see Willie on the weekends, it makes my whole weekend better,” said Callie Dewees, acting freshman. “It does. I love the man.” Besides manning the grill, Butler caters events, attends basketball games and helps with sorority philanthropy weeks. During the week when

he’s not working, he takes walks and checks on his sisters and nieces. He also loves spending time with President Robert Henry and meeting students’ parents because he feels like their parent away from home. “ Take Amanda Wright (acting senior) and her parents, for example,” Butler said. “They make me want to move to California with them. Think they’d adopt a 52-year-old man?” Butler will turn 52 on Feb. 25. He said he plans to cook brunch and bring in sheet cakes for everyone, including students without a meal plan. “They think I’m crazy to want to work on my birthday, but I’ve got to spend my day with my family,” Butler said. “Since I see you the most, y’all are my first family.” To express his gratitude and show OCU men how to properly treat a lady, Butler will host a Valentine’s Day brunch with chocolate-covered strawberries,

cupcakes, candies, stuffed animals, and heart-shaped red velvet and strawberry cheesecake pancakes, he said. Butler also plans to print Valentine’s cards to spread on the caf tables. The Valentine’s Day festivities will include the Feb. 14 brunch in the caf, as well as Valentine’s dinner from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Feb. 12 in the Great Hall in Tom and Brenda McDaniel University Center. The formal dinner requires two meal swipes, points, StarsCash, cash, or credit. Students can R.S.V.P. for the dinner by emailing Sherri Cain, catering director, at sfcain@okcu.edu by Feb. 10.

Officials review academic programs for elimination, changes Emily Wiley EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Academic programs still are being evaluated for prioritization. Programs placed in the “phase out” or elimination category, and some that were not, will be reviewed this month to see if they are functioning well enough to keep. “Most people don’t realize this, but academic programs are reviewed on a cycle every year,” said Kent Buchanan, interim provost and vice president for academic affairs. “Prioritization was a little different in that we reviewed all the programs at the same time.” Prioritization allowed

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officials to see where university money was being spent and determine if changes should be made to academic and support programs. In the past, the program review was done by a strategic planning committee. After the prioritization process was complete, officials decided there needed to be a different plan for how to review programs. “We learned so much from prioritization that we felt that we needed to update the plan,” Buchanan said. “So instead of the strategic planning committee reviewing these programs, we decided to review them the same way we did during prioritization.” The deans of the programs that are to be evaluated will meet

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Visit MediaOCU.com for more on prioritization and to see the full list of programs being reviewed.

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with Buchanan, the vice president of enrollment management and the chief financial officer of the university. They will begin reviewing the academic programs that fell into the “reduce funding” or “phase out” category of the final report. They also will review programs that were not on the list but have reasons to be reviewed such as lower enrollment or changes already happening to the

programs. These programs include studio art, criminal justice and film production. See the full list at MediaOCU.com. If a program is found to be in need of deactivation, they will follow the normal procedure of faculty and administrators reviewing the courses. Once the program has been approved for elimination, it will then move to academic committee for final

approval. “Any time a program is proposed or deactivated it has to go through several steps,” Buchanan said. “What we will be doing is looking at the similar data from the prioritization process and be evaluating programs that may need to be deactivated or may need additional resources.” After this year, the review process will go back to its normal rotation of programs to be evaluated. “I think students are tired of the constant feeling that our programs are going to be cut,” said Joseph Smith, exercise science senior. “Reviewing is good but let’s not drag it out anymore than it already has been.” The cabinet will host an open forum for the campus community

to ask questions about prioritization and initiatives the cabinet has set to “guide their future planning.” Some of these initiatives include investing in upgrades for campus facilities, evaluating athletic programs in terms of head count and revenue builders, and creating a positive campus climate. See the full list at MediaOCU.com. Buchanan and President Robert Henry will lead the forum at 2 p.m. Feb. 17 in KerrMcGee Auditorium in Meinders School of Business.

Learn from a master

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Seat changes

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Beth Kligerman will host a master class Feb. 6 for students. Read about Student Senate’s vote to redistribute seats.

Get in the game

See scores from this week’s basketball and baseball games.

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