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3-9-1983

The UCF Report, Vol. 05 No. 26, March 9, 1983

University of Central Florida

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Recommended Citation University of Central Florida, "The UCF Report, Vol. 05 No. 26, March 9, 1983" (1983). The UCF Report. 157. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/ucfreport/157 Ut'S LIBRARY ARCHIVES Univeristy of Central Florida Non-Profit Organization Orlando, Florida 32816 U.S. Postage Paid Orlando, Florida Address Correction Requested Permit No. 3575 The UCF Report

Volume 5, Number 26 for the Faculty and Staff Wednesday, March 9, 1983

Navy accepts 40 acres worth $2 million NTEC becomes 'heart' of research park

Central Florida Research Park now to the nation's capital, said the Navy has a 40-acre heart, which in the next looks on the NTEC's relocation as a months to come should be pumping, cost-savings. along the park's initial arteries, the "We've been offered joint use of uni­ scouts of other commercial research versity facilities, which will help us prospects who may want to grow with avoid th cost of building additional facili­ the Southeast's only major research ties," McHugh said. complex. Congress is expected to approve the The "heart" is the Naval Training NTEC relocation so the Navy can build a Equipment Center (NTEC), which is $20-million to $25-million complex to expected to be transplanted to the contain the equipment center. research park beginning in 1985 from According to Gunter, the Navy has its present buildings scattered around the money in hand for architects to the huge Orlando Naval Training Center design the new center and that its con­ some miles west. struction dollars are in the 1985 federal Last week the Navy Department budget. Central accepted the $2-million site that was McHugh said construction on the offered to get NTEC to locate in the 300,000-square-foot building, if started Florida 1,400-acre research park. in 1985, should be ready to be occupied "This will break the nobody-wants-to- in 1987. (Gunter said the NTEC space Research be-first syndrome," pointed out park would be equal to the floor area in the Park director Ralph Gunter. He said he's Barnett Building, just completed in been discussing sites with other pros­ downtown Orlando.) pects, and he expects the Navy decision Another 200 employees are expected

to motivate a number of NTEC subcon­ to be added to the NTEC's present 785 BARNETT BANK tractors to build in the park, too. employees, McHugh said. The Navy • NTEC commander, Capt. John uses approximately 200 UCF students McHugh, who has just been reassigned as part-time help or interns, plus about 35 university faculty as consultants, N. Millicam Endowed Chair of Computer Directly west of the UCF campus according to Gunter. Science. Westinghouse Electric Corp. is rapidly "The two endowed million-dollar The NTEC staff researches and finishing its turbine headquarters Colbourn to speak chairs the university recently estab­ designs about $600 million in simula­ building; lished were very important to the devel­ tion training equipment on which Navy On a 900-acre site a few miles south to history teachers opment and the success of the park," pilots and other personnel train before of UCF, Martin Marietta Corp. is con­ Gunter emphasized. "Too, the univer­ flying or boarding ship. structing a plant. President Trevor Colbourn will be the sity has recently established a simula­ Gunter said businessgs already com­ "The Navy is typical of what we're try­ March 19 luncheon speaker when Stet­ tion institute, which is another great mitted to build in the research park are ing to accomplish in obtaining research- son University hosts the 3-day annual help." Barnett Bank, American Electroplaters oriented tenants," Gunter said. He said meeting of the Florida Conference of The chairs referred to were the Delia Society, a Boston developer who plans the university and research park are try­ Teachers of History. Phillips-Martha Schenck Chair in Amer­ three buildings, and a computer soft­ ing to create a very close relationship Colbourn's topic will be, "The Consti­ ican Private Enterprise, and the Charles ware company. that is beneficial to both groups. tution: The Ancient World and the Con­ servation of the American Revolution.," The organization's aim is to advance the discipline of history instruction in Night escort dorm patrol hike security Florida's high education. Of two additional steps to heighten destination. have participated in half-day training campus security, one program went into • Stay at that location until your and informational sessions. effect Monday and the second program escort arrives "We appreciate the contributions of Spring blood drive will be launched next Monday. • Then the persons desiring the several on-campus departments and The Student Escort Patrol Service escort should make themselves two private corporations to this [SEPS] here next week (SEPS) went into operation Monday known to the SEPS representative. program," Seacrist stated. "The Univer­ The UCF spring semester blood drive, evening when six student escorts and "All SEPS employees will wear a dis­ sity Bookstore and the Electrical Engi­ in cooperation with the Central Florida one student supervisor stood by for calls tinctive, reflective orange-mesh vest," neering Department contributed fund­ Blood Bank, will be held March 15 and to escort women students, faculty and Seacrist explained. "The vests will have ing and communications equipment. 16 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. from the blood staff from one campus point to another, SEPS and a number printed on the "The Athletic Department and the bank's mobile unit parked at the Kiosk. said Ron Seacrist, director of Public back." Physical Plant paint shop contributed This contributed blood is available to Safety and Police. Hartzler said the RHAP phone number operational materials. The Flagship all students, faculty, staff and their When additional equipment is is 4676 or 4677. Bank of Orlando contributed operational immediate families by contacting the received, he said, the number of escorts All SEPS and RHAP members will be funds, and Radio Shack of Fashion University Health Center. will be increased to 12. equipped with 2-way radios and will Square gave additional equipment." Beginning next week, the halls in the seven campus dormitories will be UCF halts mailing patrolled from 11:30 p.m. to 6 a.m. by IRS-trained students offer tax help nine members of the Residence Hall VITA (Volunteer Income Tax Assist­ the first 3 days of the weeks through of its catalogs Auxiliary Patrol (RHAP), according to ance) is being offered the university April 6. Prospective students who wish a UCF Christi Hartzler, RHAP program community at a desk on the first floor of Hours are 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Mondays, catalog will no longer be able to request coordinator. the UCF Administration Building during Tuesdays and Wednesdays, with an a copy by mail. Both Hartzler and Seacrist said their extra hour on Mondays from 2-3 p.m. A tight budget and rising postal rates respective services would operate seven Individuals may obtain help in com­ have made a policy change necessary, days a week. pleting their returns (or have it done for said John Bush, director of admissions. Seacrist said initial hours of SEPS them) from students who have been "Copies of the catalog may be picked will be from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. trained by the Internal Revenue Service up at the main admissions office and "When additional personnel is and have passed an IRS test in prepara­ are available at our UCF centers in Day- obtained, the hours will be extended tion of returns. tona Beach, Cocoa and in South form 7 p,m. to 2 a.m.," Seacrist said. Assistance is available and tax ques­ Orlando," Bush siad. He added that He outlined this procedure for per­ tions are welcomed in this service being copies of catalogs are available for sons desiring a campus escort: Labor disgraces no man; unfor­ provided by student members of Beta examination or study at all public • Call 2422 (the Police Department tunately you occasionally find Alpha Psi and the Student Accounting libraries and at high school guidance business number) men disgrace labor. Society. offices. • Give your name, location and —Ulysses S. Grant Page 2 The UCF Report Official memoranda Publication of these memoranda and announcements about University policy and procedures constitutes official notice to faculty and staff Walter A. Bogumil Jr. chaired the program in "Human Resources Man­ agement" on Feb. 11 at the Southeast­ To: All Faculty and Staff 3/9/83 nel immediately. A delayed report not only subjects the ern meeting of the American Institute of From: Jim Bell, Personnel University to the possibility of a $100 penalty but also holds Decision in Williamsburg, Va. Subject: Workers' Compensation the possibility of jeopardizing the entire claim. A prompt report will help you. Mary Palmer (Instructional Programs) One of the most valuable benefits available to you as an The University cannot provide the medical help you need, conducted an in-service program on employee of the University is the Workers' Compensation or any other benefits for which you may qualify, if it is not Feb. 14 for Brevard County secondary Insurance coverage that provides for medical attention and reported that you have been injured on the job. music teachers. Her topic was, "Devel­ financial protection in the event of an on-the-job injury. oping Continuity in Music Education for What is Workers' Compensation? Workers' Compensa­ Brevard County Schools. tion is insurance against on-the-job injury or illness that is David Block (FSEC), chairman of the furnished by the University at no cost to you. To: All Academic Advisors 3/9/83 Interstate Sqlar Coordination Council, Who is eligible for Workers' Compensation? All From I.E. Knight, was keynote speaker at the group's employees of the University, including student assistants, Director of Records and Registration annual meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah, temporary personnel, and OPS employees who incur on- Subject: Change of Major/College Jan. 12-14. Other FSEC attendees the-job injuries. The schedule for processing Change-of-Major/College included Shay Southwick, Carolyn What does Workers' Compensation pay for? It covers all forms is furnished for your information. Burby, James Huggins and James medical expenses when you are injured on the job. It also For Summer Semester 1 983 all forms received will be Roland. provides partial salary replacement benefits every two processed no later than March 25, 1983, and Advisement Marvin Yarosh (FSEC) headed a weeks if you are unable to work for longer than 7 days due and Trial schedules will be generated on April 1, 1983. seminar on field monitoring of active to your injury. Immediately after up-date (Change of Major/College, solar energy systems Jan. 21 -22 at What should I do if I get hurt? If it's a minor injury such Change of grades, Addresses, Academic Actions and other FSEC. The seminar, attended by 20 as a small cut or bruise, secure First Aid treatment if neces­ transactions), the registration files will be finalized for national solar experts, was sponsored sary and then come to Personnel (Adm 230) and fill out the Summer Semester 1983 registration, which begins on April by the U.S. Department of Energy "Notice of Injury" form. If there is a concern that immediate 11, 1983. through the Solar Energy Research medical attention may be needed, go straight to the Univer­ The above procedure will help in locating misrouted T & Institute. sity Physician in the Student Health Center. A's and grade reports. Philip Fairey (FSEC) presented five After treatment you must complete the "Notice of Injury" Thank you. papers at the 1983 International Day- form within 24 hours. If you witness or discover a severely lighting Conference Feb. 16-18 in Pho­ injured person, call the University Police, extension 2421. enix, Ariz. Titles included, "Instrumen­ If I get hurt on the job, may I go to the doctor of my 3/4/83 tation for Daylighting Research," "The choice? No. Not unless authorized to do so by a University To: All Faculty & Staff participants in Spring Importance of Economics in Sizing Sky­ physician. Florida law (Chap. 440, FS) permits the University Graduation Exercises light Systems," and "Impact of Occu­ to choose the physician who will treat on-the-job injuries. From: Dick Scott, Director, Auxiliary Services pancy Schedules on Skylight Energy The University has designated the physicians in the Student Subject: Rental of Academic Regalia for Faculty for the Performance." "The Sky's the Limit," Health Center as the initial referral source for all Workers' Graduation Exercises on April 29, 1983 also by McCluney, was published in the Compensation cases. The University Bookstore has mailed out through campus November issue of Construction Should an on-the-job injury require treatment after regu­ mail order forms to rent academic regalis for the coming Specifier. lar work hours or on weekends, the proper procedure is to Spring Graduation exercises to the chairmen and deans of Geroge B. Lowe (Ceramics, Art) has call the Student Health Center to make arrangements for their respective departments. a one-man show entitled, "Inherent treatment there or to get the proper authorization for treat­ These forms must be completed and returned to the Marks of the Wheel" at the Cornell Fine ment elsewhere. Bookstore by March 11. Rental charges which follow are in Arts Center at Rollins College, through Remember, it is very important that you report a job- advance with orders. Refunds will not be made after 5 p.m. March 13. He also recently juried the related accident or injury to your supervisor and to Person- on March 11, 1983. Clermont Art Festival. Master's Cap & Gown $8 + .40 tax= $ 8.40 Flora Ann Pinder (Cooperative Educa­ Master's Hood $8 + .40 tax = $ 8.40 tion/Placement) has been approved by the National Board of Certified RESOLUTION Doctor's Cap & Gown $10 + .50 tax = $10.50 Doctor's Hood $10 + .50 tax = $10.50 Counselors as a National Certified WHEREAS, energy conservation efforts of State agen­ Counselor (NCC). cies enabled State government to meet or exceed the Beth Barnes (Undergraduate Studies) eight percent goal established in the January 5, 1982, served as chief judge for the Central resolution by the Governor and Cabinet; and To: All Building Managers 3/1/83 Florida Regional Brain Bowl held at WHEREAS, State government revenues continue to From: Joyce A. Clampitt, Seminole Community College on Feb. decline due to economic conditions; and Assistant Vice-President for Business Affairs 11. WHEREAS, energy costs of State government continue Subject: Staff Restrooms William Oelfke (Physics) travelled to to increase despite reduced consumption, Dartmouth College / Lebanon Feb. 16- The President's Advisory Staff has approved the designa­ NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that a five percent tion of two staff restrooms in each building as being "no- 20 to present a symposium on his har­ per square foot energy reduction in building energy con­ monic oscillator research. smoking" areas. Therefore, I would appreciate your notify­ sumption by each agency be achieved by December 31, ing this office of the one women's restroom and one men's Jack Brennen (Physics) was an 1983, when compared to like 1982 consumption. restroom that you wish to designate as non-smoking areas invited speaker and science advisor for BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that in their FY 84-85 in the building for which you are responsible. a conference on national development budget requests, each State agency shall seek funds to and science in Daveo City, Philippines. Please let us know either in writing or by phone (2550) by install electric, steam, hot water, and chilled water March 15, 1983, in order that a list may be compiled for dis­ He also spoke to faculty and students on meters, where cost-effective retrofit projects are other "Physics Problems for the Computer," tribution and that appropriate signage be installed. wise known. Thank you in advance to your attention to this matter. "Evaluation of Student performances," BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that each agency achieve a and "The Laws of Physics, the Universe four percent reduction in fuel consumption by State- and Technology." owned vehicles by December 31,1983, when compared Charles Wellman (Art) was the juror to like 1982 fuel consumption. for the University of Florida Light Sensi­ BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Department of tive IV exhibition of photo art works, the General Services shall, during March 1984 report to the fourth annual exhibition sponsored by Announcements Governor and Cabinet the accomplishments of each the art department at the U of F. The agency toward meeting these goals. To: All Faculty & Library staff 3/2/83 exhibition will be open to the public IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, the Governor and Cabinet From: Joan Johnson-Freese, UCF Representative to the May 2-18 at Gainesville's historic Tho­ of the State of Florida have subscribed their names and Inter-university Consortium for Political and mas Center Galleries. He also is exhibit­ have caused the Official Seal of the State of Florida to be Social Research (ICPSR) ing at Virginia Intermont College, Bris­ heretunto affixed, in the city of Tallahassee, Florida, on Subject: Summer Program in Quantitative Methods of tol, Va. The public exhibition, titled this 1 st day of February, 1983. "Works on Paper," is open through Social Research at the March. BOB GRAHAM Anyone interested in more information about the above Governor summer program should contact me (x2088, HFA 427) before April 8, 1983. Participation is limited to candidates GEORGE FIRESTONE nominated by the Florida ICPSR federated membership. A Secretary of State limited amount of financial support is available. Jim Smith There will be two special workshops held as part of the Attorney General program: Quantitative Analysis of Crime and Criminal Jus­ tice, and Asian American Research Methods. GERALD LEWIS We have an answer! Comptroller How much would UCF's average BILL GUNTER To: All interested weekly use of 800 cases of soft drinks Treasurer translate to in dollars and cents if used From: Stuart E. Omans, Chairman, Department of Eng­ cans were collected and sold? RALPH TURLINGTON lish 'Twould be $200 per week, or Commissioner of Subject: English Department Proficiency Exams $19,200 per year, according to Bill Education The English Department Proficiency Exam for majors in Morris (Operations Analysis), with an DOYLE CONNER English, foreign languages, music, and theatre will be given "assirt" from Mary Lou Burgess Commissioner of on Saturday, March 1 2, from 10 a.m. to noon in ENGR 110. (Internal Auditing). Agriculture Wednesday, March 9, 1983 Page 3

serious consequences of ignoring the Academically Speaking test. The Counseling and Testing Center reports, for example, that 920 students UCF students at top of 1st CLAST tests have registered for the March 19 exam­ ination, but we estimate that there are at least 200 more students who should If we compare the scores of our stu­ ument showing where each of the also have registered. By BETH BARNES dents to those of students at the other CLAST skills is addressed in the UCF So that these students will be allowed Assistant Dean, four-year institutions, we see that UCF curriculum, and that is available to you. to continue at the University, please Undergraduate Studies ranked first on the writing test (objec­ You may recall that students do not help us to identify them. On October 23, 1982, the first tive), tied for first on the reading test, have to pass the CLAST until 1984, The summer exam is June 4, but the College-Level Academic Skills Test ranked second on computation, and tied although the examination is required of: registration deadline is May 6. Unfortu­ (CLAST) was administered to all for third place on the essay. 1) all sophomores during the semes­ nately, this is before summer classes second-semester sophomores and A.A. Perhaps we should resist this kind of ter in which they compelte the 55th- begin and the state allows no late applicants enrolled in Florida universi­ quantification, but in this instance it can 59th hour, regardless of how many registration. ties and community colleges. be excused — our students did do very more hours they complete that term, Undergraduate Studies will send let­ Copies of individual score reports were well and we have every reason to be 2) all applicants for the A.A. degree, ters of notification to transfer students mailed to students some time ago and proud of them. and admitted for the summer. We also will also placed in their folders, and the If you are interested in seeing all of 3) all transfers who have not had an publicize the registration deadline date scores appear on the transcript. the test data which was furnished to us opportunity to take the examination, and have representatives at summer Quite recently, we received reports on by the Tallahassee CLAST office — and with the exception of those who have registration. student performance throughout the there is a good deal of it — it is availa­ been continuously enrolled in a Florida But would you also remind your advi­ state. The following chart indicates how ble in Undergraduate Studies (ADM state university since before August sees and your students about CLAST exceptionally well UCF students scored: .210). We also have put together a doc- 1982 and who completed 60 hours and send those who must take the before that date. summer test to Undergraduate Studies STATE UNIVERSITY PERFORMANCES The penalty imposed by the to register? Institutions — 4 year state for failing to take the Finally, for your future use, the fol­ CLAST is severe. An A.A. appli­ lowing CLAST dates are important: Number of cant who does not take it will Test Administration Registration Institution Examinees Computation Reading Writing Essay not receive the degree, and a Day Deadline UCF 580 317 315 313 5.1 second-semester sophomore or UF 1165 320 315 312 5.4 transfer who fails to take the June 4, 1983 May 6, 1983 FSU 1014 307 309 308 5.3 CLAST must do so the very next October 1, 1983 September 2, 1983 March 10, 1984 February 10, 1984 USF 716 308 309 308 5.1 term of attendance or be barred May 4, 1984 FAMU 197 281 277 283 4.1 from further enrollment. June 2, 1984 Institutions — Traditionally Upp er Division Only While this office makes every attempt September 29, 1984 August 31, 1984 FIU 25 327 315 317 5.6 to notify these students of the CLAST March 9, 1985 February 8, 1985 UWF 5 319 301 310 4.0 requirement, both before they are June 1,1985 May 3, 1985 UNF - ... required to take the exam and after they As you can see, CLAST has become a FAU - ... failed to register for it, we need your reality within the State University Sys­ * The mean state score on the essay was 4.7 and on each of the other tests it was 300 help as well to remind them of the tem. And in a very short time, students Scores throughout the stte ranged from 2 to 8 on the Essay, 176 to 365 in Computa­ will be required to present passing tion, 1 65 to 363 in Reading, and 135 to 352 in Writing. scores on the examination in order to receive an A.A. degree or to enter the upper division of a state university. In fact, within the next few months some of you may be asked to serve on a state- level or university-level committee to recommend appropriate minimum scores. If you have any question about the skills, the test, the registration or test­ ing procedures, please do not hesitate to call the Office of Undergraduate Studies. CLAST is only one part of a large movement which began in the legisla­ ture several years ago to ensure that univeristy and community college stu­ dents master certain essential skills. In a few weeks, some words about the Gordon Rule.

Seminar Tuesday on interviews, resume writing The Instructional Technology Stu­ dents' Association of UCF is sponsoring PROFESSOR JACK C. PLANO AUTOGRAPHS COPIES OF HIS BOOKS FOR UCF FACULTY MEMBERS a seminar at 6 p.m. Tuesday on inter­ John DiPierro Beth Barnes Robert Bledsoe John Bersia Joan Johnson-Freese view techniques and resume writing as well as how to prepare for interviews and why the standard resume format New internat'l relations journal due in April isn't always the best. Presenting this information will be UCF board members of Global Perspectives—the forum for responsible, objective expression at the Ms. Jacquelyn King, placement counse­ first international, interdisciplinary, professional college and university level, as well as the oppor­ lor from the Co-op and Placement Cen­ journal of international relations devoted entirely to tunity for qualified students to publish and progress ter, and Robert Harmon, director of the the advanced research of senior undergraduate and in fields of international politics, international eco­ Counseling and Testing Center. graduate students—welcomed internationally- nomics, international business and marketing, The program, free and open to all known author/scholar and advisory board member international security, international law, interna­ interested person, will be held in Engi­ Jack C. Piano to the UCF campus last week. tional organization, international history, interna­ neering Auditorium 260. Piano's UCF visit came just as the board placed tional development, international relations theory finishing touches on the first issue of Global and methodology, international culture and lan­ Perspectives. guage studies, international education, all area The journal, whose editorial board includes 30 studies, and all subfields. professionals from 7 countries (many of them lead­ Piano, the author of 17 books and monographs ing authorities with international reputations in and editor of the Clio Political Science Dictionary their fields), will be published this April and sent to Series, is professor of political science and chair­ Publications 25 countries. man of that department at Western Michigan Four UCF faculty members are involved with the University. journal, as are four alumni. John C. DiPierro is co- He is a widely respected authority in interna­ and papers founder and managing editor, Robert L. Bledsoe tional relations, American foreign policy, interna­ and Joan Johnson-Freese and editorial board tional economics, international organization, Amer­ Guy Mattson and John Gupton (both members, and Beth W. Barnes is editorial ican national government and international Chemistry) co-authored a 2-page article consultant. environmental issues. His books and dictionaries entitled, "A Cooperative M.S. Program Alumni Roy Werner, Julie Strickland and Susan are used at UCF and in many colleges and universi­ in Industrial Chemistry" (describing Padgett also are editorial board members. 1977 ties around the world. UCF's graduate program from its 1975 UCF alumnus John C. Bersia is co-founder and Anyone interested in submitting an article inception to date), in Journal of Chemi­ editor-in-chief. and/or subscribing to the journal should contact cal Education, Vol. 60, No. 2, February Global Perspectives' purpose is to provide a DiPierro, (Foreign Languages), HFA 437. 1983. Page 4 The UCF Report

It's fair for eng

F I y i

Contestant Gene Groves launches his paper plane in hopes it would keep aloft the longest. . . but it went to the floor as another entry that needs more work. More delic the bridge ei Anyone guage was u pounds of pi for imaginative Winner To bridge? bridge undei the most pre Wednesday, March 9, 1983 Page 5 games ineers

3ut-to-become engineers again went deep into imaginations recently to come up with paper s, balsa bridges and egg yolks to test the princi- >f aerodynamics, stress and gravity. iffi, this yearly event saw many more participants winners. But after all. who wins if you don't give y?

Y o I k i • Object: take an egg (like James Root is doing at top) load it into a device that will keep it from breaking when it drops from te measurements were made this year on the Engineering ries (above) when a sensitive pressure Building roof to 3d to indicate the exact amount of the ground. ssure it took to damage the many Root's contrie- ructures submitted, vance failed him d Weaver (below) carefully places his . . . but (below) he pressure point — and his entry took one of the sure before it broke. judges signals to Gene Groves (whose plane was an also-ran) that his dropped egg ended up without a crack! Page 6 The UCF Report

Suzuki violinists UCF Library Current Awareness Report perform March 17 at Rehearsal Hall their course and admissions requirements. And a panel A special bi-weekly report from the UCF Library of named by the association is holding hearings throughout The Dommerich Elementary Suzuki excerpts of newspaper articles dealing with important the country in an attempt to diagnose the ills of the present Violin Players will be performing on issues and developments in higher education. system by taking the pulse of educators, physicians, and campus Thursday, March 17, at noon in students, many of whom believe that change is necessary. the Rehearsal hall. In recent years, these critics say, the competition has These young musicians, ages 7 to 11, SCIENCE FREEDOM THREATENED BY SCIENCE become increasingly severe and the course of study almost have performed for retirement homes, SECURITY — The Tampa Tribune-Times, 2/13, p. 4-C. impossibly difficult because of the explosive growth of med­ civic clubs, educational and religious "Pressures from government and industry for secrecy in ical knowledge. To succeed, would-be doctors have little organizations, Fiesta in the Park, two some areas of research have prompted warnings from a choice but to devote themselves almost entirely to the pur­ state music conventions, the national growing number of scientists against undermining the tradi­ suit of their career. Many medical educators worry that the PTA Conference, National ACE Conven­ tional freedom of scientific inquiry. The researchers see the present system creates intellectual drudges who have suc­ tion, and three television programs. emergence of two forces that could hinder progress in cessfully crammed vast quantities of factual material into They have taken four tours through­ basic scientific research. One is the effort by high- their brains, but whose creativity and sensitivity to human out Florida and this April plan a major technology companies to keep potentially profitable discov­ needs have been stifled." concert tour through Georgia and South eries out of the hands of competitors; the other is the effort Carolina. by government to prevent the leakage to the Soviet Union of MED SCHOOLS SEEK TO HUMANIZE DOCTORS — (by what it considers strategically important technology. 'I'm The Dommerich Violinists are David Perlman) San Francisco Chronicle, 2/17, p. 47. very worried now about the entirely understandable ten­ directed by Doris Hotaling, wife of "Faced with incredible advances in medical technology, dency on the part of university scientists to seek early pat­ Edward Hotaling (Mu^sic). plus the kind of specialization that sends patients running ents and to get their own mini-versions of a corporate world endlessly from one doctor to another doctor they never get around the university.' said Dr. Lewis Thomas, the chancel­ to know, America's medical estalishment is taking a long, Re-entering women lor of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute, in an hard look at how it produces physicians and how it can interview with the Scientists' Institute for Public Informa­ humanize them. Leaders in medicine are trying to discover review math thru tion. 'I think that is going to divert people from fundamental ways to mold new students into physicians of technical skill inquiry. And it's going to change the way science is done and humane insight, and to endow specialists with arcane computer course and the way science is looked at.' On the question of skills in an era of such revolutionary scientific change that government-imposed secrecy, Paul Gray, president of the Harold Klee (Industrial Engineering) today's knowledge becomes obsolete even before a young Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has said, 'This coun­ has developed software to supplement a intern finishes the first years of advanced training. At the try's scientific and technological leadership has its roots in math review course taken by re­ University of California in San Francisco, a panel of 18 the universities, whose strengths are based on open and entering women in engineering. Re­ noted educators and physicians recently launched a major shared exploration of ideas in education and research. A entering students sometimes face diffi­ series of nationwide hearings to examine the nature of med­ departure from this principle in certain fields would mean culty in a graduate program because ical education and to develop a program that could bring that many institutions would be unwilling to work in those basic mathematical fundamentals tend sweeping changes to medicine in the near future. The hear­ areas, leading to a loss of effort and, most critically, a loss of to be forgotten. ings are being sponsored by the Association of American trained young people in just those fields the government is This is a specially designed course Medical Colleges with a $600,000 grant from the Henry J. trying to safeguard.'" review of the mathematics required for Kaiser Family Foundation. The UCSF panel heard testimony entrance into the graduate program, HELP FOR SCIENCE MAY BE ON WAY — (By Dena from many doctors in many disciplines, from education which includes analytic geometry, cal­ Kleiman) The Times. 2/22. p. 1 -C. experts, and from dozens of medical students who offered culus and differential equations. "Public concern over the quality of science and mathe­ an impromptu series of highly personal pleas and urgent Using this software, students select a matics teaching has risen in recent years to a pitch recalling recommendations. In many ways the students reflected the text chapter covering a certain skill, and the frenzy of reform that followed the Soviet Union's launch­ views of all the 67,000 young men and women who attend the computer generates practice prob­ ing of Sputnik 1, 25 years ago. Though there is yet no con­ this county's 127 medical schools. They complained lems based on information in the chap­ sensus on what exactly should be done, a great many public unanimously that in the first two years of medical school — ters. Students then work the problem officials at all levels now agree that some kind of action is their 'basic science' years — they are burdened with and use the computer to find out if they required, and soon. Earlier this month, reversing its pre­ courses so detailed, so technical and so unrelated to what have completed the problems correctly. vious policy of noninvolvement, the Reagan Administration they must know as doctors treating patients that their crea­ If not, the computer directs them to proposed the allocation over the next four years of more tivity is stifled, their academic lives reduced to memoriza­ specific sections in the text chapters for than $200 million to address the nationwide shortage of tion, and their ability to apply the science to real-life medical further study. science and mathematics teachers. In Congress, already problems hampered." This program will help encourage more than a dozen bills are pending that address the short­ MED SCHOOLS URGED TO STRESS CARE FOR AGED women to continue in graduate engi­ age of teachers, the need for new research and the — The Atlanta Constitution, 2/10, p. 21. neering studies. It will also be available replacement of outmoded equipment. At issue is the "Citing the growing challenge of a graying America, the to other engineering majors. nation's technological prowess as compared to the Soviet American Association of Medical Colleges Wednesday Funding for the project was provided Union and to such economic competition as Japan and West urged, the nation's medical schools to increase their empha­ by the university's Learning Resource Germany. But in the debate over how technological supe­ sis on care for people over 65. Many of the nation's 1 27 Council. These grants are coordinated riority can be gained through improvements in the schools, medical schools do not adequately emphasize the unique by the Instructional Resources Office. legislators, educators and others are grappling with diverse problems of the elderly, said Dr. Joseph Johnson, chairman For these and other faculty development other issues as well: the role of the Federal Government in of a committee that developed the association's new guide­ projects, the Instructional Development drafting education policy, the functions of the National lines for medical educators. 'Just as infants and children are office (x2571) may be contacted. Science Foundation as compared to those of the Depart­ not young adults, the elderly are not older middle-aged peo­ ment of Education, the need for changes in the way mathe­ ple,' the committee report said. 'For this reason, the man­ matics and science teachers are recruited and paid at a time agement of illnesses in older people differs from the man­ when industry is prepared to pay them more, and other agement of the same illnesses in people of other ages.' aspects of the nation's priorities for technical training. They More than 25 million Americans — 11 percent of the popu­ are raising questions about the importance of scientific lation — are now over 65, and it has been estimated that McClean, Modeen training in the early grades of elementary school as com­ number will grow to 55 million and 18 percent of the popu­ new champions of pared to focusing primarily on high schools, the role of the lation in less than 50 years ... The report had five general state as opposed to the local school boards in determining recommendations for medical schools: —Provide a focus for UCF golfers changes in outmoded curriculums, the value of altering the change that increases attention to the aging process and tax code to provide incentives to industry to help provide and The UCF Golf Association held its first elderly patients. —Seek support for expanded research in sustain teachers, as well as the problem of how in the long Annual Tournament of Champions aging. —Offer greater exposure of medical students to run teachers are to be recruited and trained. The result has recently at the Alhambra Golf and Ten­ elderly patients in a variety of settings. —Arrange for stu­ been numerous proposals for change that cut across politi­ nis Club, Orlando. dents to interact with healthy, independent elderly people. cal lines and have emanated from different Congressional — Encourage medical specialty groups to disseminate geriat­ There were 1 50 members of the UCF committees ... Among those pending include proposals for ric information in their fields." Golf Association eligible to participate grants to individual schools, scholarship incentives for indi­ in this event (members who had won vidual teachers, tax credits to companies who employ INTERDISCIPLINARY CURRICULA ON INCREASE — prizes except the skill prizes). The mathematics and science teachers during the summer, pro­ (by Lee Mitgang) Los Angeles Times, 2/11, p. 8, part l-A. winners of the Tournament were: grams that would give Federal loans to mathematics and "Peter Karle, a senior at Chaminade High School in A Flight — low gross, Doug McClean; science majors, which they need not repay if they go into Mineola, NY., faced a tough choice this year as he tried to low net, Don Bradford; 2nd low net, teaching, grants to universities to retrain teachers during decide what sort of college was right for him. His dilemma is Rudy Radigan; 3rd low net, Wayne the summer. Some of the proposals seek exclusively to pro­ shared by many high school seniors around the country: He Mendell. duce more teachers. Others focus on the nation's research thinks of himself as a liberal arts student. But he also has a B Flight — low gross, Jim Taylor; low activities and research equipment." passion for science and computers and worries that four net, Bob Lloyd; 2nd low net, John expensive years of Greek, sociology and philosophy at a typ­ Smith; 3rd low net, Pete Lum; 4th low ARE SCHOOLS SCREENING OUT BEST? — (By Paul ical liberal arts school might not prepare him for a tough job net, Pete Hodgin. Jacobs) Los Angeles Times, 2/11. p. 1 market. Now a growing number of colleges — technological C Flight — low gross, Jerry Gomes; "For the first time in 50 years, American medical schools schools and liberal arts colleges alike — are beginning to low net, Larry Rankin; 2nd low net, have begun a systematic look at the education of physicians respond to that concern. As a result, liberal arts at some of Ralph Meade; 3rd low net, George Bar- out of concern that the demands may be too great and that America's most prestigious schools is entering a new era — quist; 4th low net, Bert McCree. the process of selection may exclude some of the very indi­ one in which courses about energy, computers and engineer­ Ladies Flight — low gross, ?Evie viduals who would make the finest doctors. The effort, being ing may come to share equal billing with traditional offer­ Modeen; low net, Carrie Johnston; 2nd spearheaded by the Assn. of American Medical. Colleges, is ings like history, English and philosophy. Some examples of low net, Martha Bradford; 3rd low net, an attempt to find out what significant reforms can be made what is in store this fall: — Wellesley College, in Wellesley, Shayla Bratcher. to a process best described as an educational marathon that Mass., will offer a new 'Technology Studies' curriculum, D Flight — low gross, Lester Fletcher; ends only after nine or more years of punishing competition. geared to humanities and social science students. It eventu­ low net, Stan Gordon; 2nd low net, Walt Individual medical schools have already begun to respond to ally will include 14 courses. — , in Oberlin, Dawson Jr.; 3rd low net, John Sands. what they see as a crisis in medical education by reforming Ohio, will offer programs in computer uses in the humani- Wednesday, March 9, 1983 Page 7

ties and fine arts, as well as courses to help students with CORPORATE JOB RECRUITING ON CAMPUSES Kathy Fox named little math or science background learn the role of technol­ DROPS DRASTICALLY — (by Stephanie Salter) San ogy in creating and solving society's problems. At Davidson Francisco Examiner, 2/13, p. 1-B. to nat'l committee College, in Davidson, N.C., faculty in disciplines including "Campus recruiting, a traditional vehicle for employment Kathy Fox, assistant athletic trainer, political science, philosophy, psychology and sociology are for many college students, is down everywhere this year, in has accepted appointment to the reworking some courses to focus more on problem solving, some schools as much as an estimated 25 percent. Banks National Athletic Trainer's Association data analysis and computer simulation. A new course, 'A have canceled entire schedules of interviews. Oil companies Professional Education Committee to Study of Great Monuments,' will study structures like the have cut back and are looking for only a few specific types of serve as a member of the curriculum Eiffel Tower, Brooklyn Bridge and the Parthenon on the the­ employees. Large retailers haven't bothered to schedule evaluation team. ory that they provide clues to human behavior." appointments, and even corporations in the microelectron­ In this capacity, Fox will travel with ics industry have lessened their search for new talent. Stan­ WHERE IN THE WORLD IS LONDON? 42% TESTED AT the committee to various colleges and ford Director of Student Placement Chris Shinkman said UM DIDN'T KNOW — (by Elizabeth Morgan) The Miami universities to review and evaluate that 10 percent to 1 5 percent of recruiting traffic originally Herald, 2/15, p. 1-B. existing (National Athletic Trainer's scheduled for this school year has been canceled by corpo­ "When University of Miami geography students took a Association) athletic training curricu- rations. That includes all of Wells Fargo Bank's scheduling. test on the first day of class this semester, 8.5 per cent of lums. Recommendations on continua­ San Francisco State had about 1 5 cancellations from its them couldn't find Miami on a world map. Now, Assistant tion of the curriculum, or necessary originally scheduled 80 this year. This all sounds so Professor David Helgren says his suspicions are confirmed: improvements needed, then are made. gloomy, but I guess it is accurate,' said Penny Johnson, American undergraduates are lousy at geography. Two manager of S.F. State's Career Services program. The years ago, when Helgren taught at the University of Califor­ amount of students who want to use these services has nia in Davis, students would come up after a climate class gone up — about 200 from last year — but the number of and ask where London was, he says. In a poll of 1 28 UM Accounting groups people here to recruit has gone down. Even in the engineer­ geography students last month, Helgren found that 42 per­ ing fields there have been fewer hires. They just aren't get­ to hear Grierson cent of them — from freshmen to seniors — didn't know ting the high turnover rate in that field that they used to.' At where London was. 'The numbers generated were pretty Peter Grierson (Accounting) spoke the University of California in Berkeley, the number of stu­ disgusting,' Helgren said Monday. 'I gave them a map of the about assertive listening before the dents signing up for interviews has gone up a couple of world and said, "Tell me where this is,"' Helgren said. Student Accounting Society and Beta hundred to about 1,300 per week, said James Briggs, direc­ 'Some of the answers were worse than I thought ... 7 per­ Alpha Psi Monday. tor of Career Planning and Placement. Conversely, approxi­ cent couldn't get the North Atlantic Ocean." "You can't Grierson is vice-presdent of commun­ mately 60 recruiters of about 450 have modified their sched­ imagine where some of the places were put,' Helgren said. ications and community affairs for the ules and about 70 have 'flat our canceled.'" 'Capetown was put at the end of South America rather than National Association of Accountants. in Africa.' The things that wandered the most were New Guinea and Algeria,' Helgren said. 'They appeared every BLACK STUDIES RETRENCH, PLACING EMPHASIS ON place in the world. New Guinea was in Quebec and in Cen­ INTELLECTUAL QUALITY — (by Keith Graham) The tral America.' And it wasn't just foreign spots the students Atlanta Constitution, 2/16, p. 1-B. couldn't find. Forty-one percent of the students couldn't "As an undergraduate attending The School of Visual Arts Grant locate Los Angeles. And 55 percent couldn't find Chicago, in , Tina Dunkley often asked about black con­ Helgren said." tributions to the visual arts. Often as not, her teachers couldn't tell her. Ms. Dunkley finally got some answers, opportunities YALE STUDENTS LEARNING PRACTICAL POLITICS — though, when she enrolled in the master of arts program in (by Samuel G. Freedman) The New York Times, 2/20, Afro-American studies at Atlanta University. She found the Prospects for the Growth and Influ­ p. 76. university owned one of the largest collections of Afro- ence of the Gulf Cooperation Council "First, Janet Stearns studied politics the Yale way, with American art from 1942-'70, a collection which lay largely (Virginia Contracting Activity) — To tomes by Hobbs and lectures on St. Thomas Aquinas. Then unnoticed. After writing a thesis on the collection, she examine the organization, make-up and she became a ward committeeman in this city (New Haven, sought to ensure interest in it not die; she became, in 1 980, future prospects for the Gulf Coopera­ Conn.) and discovered the importance of attending wakes. the collection's first full-time curator. Black studies made a tion Council and assess the possiblity, if Tony Williams won election to the city's Board of Aldermen big difference in Ms. Dunkley's understanding of her own any, that it may develop, adopt and during his junior year at Yale. Marvin Krislov is a classmate culture, as it has done for many students since its inception carry out unified economic, foreign and and a fellow alderman, who will leave the board in May to as an academic field in the late '60s and early '70s. But strategic policies and standardized attend Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. 'At first I indications on campuses around the country now suggest arms-purchasing programs. Due March thought they'd be mad at the Yalie for leaving in the middle that the field faces important challenges to ensure its survi­ 28. of my term,' Mr. Krislov said. 'But several aldermen said I val in the '80s. Begun with an unprecedented rush of Student Decision-Making regarding improved their image, because now people couldn't say the enthusiasm and spurred by pressure from militant students, Postsecondary Education (ED) — To Board of Aldermen was a bunch of dummies.' Miss Stearns, Afro-American studies programs are now entering an era of develop a comprehensive model which Mr. Krislov and Mr. Williams are among a group of about 35 retrenchment. The period of rapid growth has come to an describes the factors that determine students and recent graduates of Yale to enter, and become end." whether or not an individual will pursue a force in, the partisan politics of this city of 130,000. They education beyond high school and what do not command major power — two out of 32 aldermanic STATE'S COLLEGES ARE 'BEGINNING TO CATCH UP' type of institution the individual will seats on New Haven's equivalent of a city council. But their (by Bo Emerson) The Atlanta Constitution, 2/10, p. 1. choose to attend. Due March 31. role is significant considering that most Yale students could p. 3-R. Solar Thermal Research and Devel­ not even vote here until 1971, when the national voting age "As Georgia prepares for the technological wonders of opment Summer Faculty Program was lowered to 18. The Democratic regulars recognize the 1980s, the state's college students will have to arm (DOE-ASEE) — Faculty participants we're always going to have different priorities, be more lib­ themselves with more sophisticated training and at the will work with professional peers at the eral,' Mr. Krislov said. 'But as far as they're concerned, a same time hold a firm grasp on the basics of reading, writ­ solar thermal installations on research Democrat is a Democrat and if we produce votes, they're ing, mathematics and science. Georgia's colleges and uni­ and development tasks of mutual inter­ happy.' 'I welcome them,' said Vincent Mauro, the chairman versities, as those in other states in the South, have for est. Solar thermal R&D installations of the Democratic Town Committee. 'Just look at our plurali­ years lagged behind the rest of the country in academic participating in the program are: Solar ties in the Yale wards.'" excellence. But finally, state educators say, Georgia is Central Receiver Systems and Central COLLEGE PUTS BUSINESSES TO WORK FOR STU­ beginning to catch up. 'Prior to 1964, we didn't have any­ Receiver Test Facility, Sandia National DENTS — The New York Times, 2/20, p. 53. thing to attract or hold students here,' said Dr. Thomas F. Laboratories; Thermal Power Systems "John D'Elia is an investment, of sorts. A large insurance McDonald, a vice chancellor for the Board of Regents, the Project, Jet Propulsion Laboratory; and company has put $5,000 into his mind, or, more precisely, 15-member board which governs the state's university sys­ Solar Thermal Systems, Solar Energy into paying for part of the college education that will tem of 33 higher education institutions. 'We're still behind, Research Institute. Due April 1. enhance his mind. For Mr. D'Elia, the scholarship money but I don't feel any shame. My pride is in where we were NSF - U.S.-Japan Cooperative means graduating on schedule this June from Trinity Col­ and where we've come.' Last year Georgia Tech ranked first Science. Due April 1. lege here (Hartford, Conn.), instead of dropping out to work with more National Merit Scholars — 407 — and more NSF - U.S.-Australia Cooperative for a while to meet $11,200 in annual costs, or falling more National Achievement Scholars — 107 — than any other Science. Due April 1. than $10,000 into debt on student loans. For the company, public institution in the country. Only , Har- NSF - U.S.-New Zealand Cooperative ' the Cigna Corporation of Bloomfield, Conn., the money vard/Radcliffe College, Princeton University, Washington Science. Due April 1. means good public relations in its home region and the University and Rice University — all private — had more Criteria for Designing Lightweight chance to watch and perhaps recruit Mr. D'Elia or one of merit scholars. In the number of National Achievement Concrete Bridges (DOT) — To collect seven other Trinity students it is aiding. 'When I first heard Scholars, reserved for black students, the University of and evaluate existing information on about the scholarship,' said Mr. D'Elia, who is 21 years old, Georgia came in second among the country's public the material and structural properties of 'I wondered what Cigna was sticking their noses in for. schools. It ranked 11th in numbers of merit scholars. The lightweight aggregate concrete includ­ What was in it for them? But I guess it's a way of investing, amount of scholars attracted to Georgia schools is no acci­ ing its limitations, and to prepare a instead of in traditional things — stocks, bonds — in peo­ dent. 'We really hustle for them,' McDonald said. 'You report which will provide guidance to ple's futures.' This investment is the basis for Trinity Col­ wouldn't believe how competitive it is. We get lists and go potential users of the material in the lege's Capitol Area Corporate Scholar Program, now mid­ see their parents.' But McDonald acknowledges that all is design, construction or rehabilitation of way through its first year. Seven corporations from the not rosy. The state has a way to go before it can compete highway bridges. Special emphasis will Hartford area have given $5,000 a year in scholarships to with northern schools, he says." be placed on structural applications of 15 Trinity students from the Hartford area. Each corporation prestressed lightweight concrete. Due is paired with a specific student or students, rather than just April 6. putting the money in the college's general scholarship fund. Center for Field Research — Private Trinity officials say they believe that the program is the only funds and volunteer staff are provided such example of coporate aid to individual students in the Complete articles are available from the Reference to scientists and humanists conducting nation. The program comes at a time when many colleges Department, UCF Library, Orlando, Florida, 32816. field research. Both basic and applied like Trinity are trying to cope with increasing student need research projects are considered in any for financial aid. A number of colleges are also raising tui­ humanities or science discipline. To tion as the Federal Government tightens standards for qualify for support, the research must receiving student loans. Some schools have devoted more of be able to utilize volunteers in the field their budgets to scholarships. But money from colleges work. Preliminary proposals may be alone usually cannot keep pace with students' demand for submitted any time. financial aid." For further information, please con­ tact Nancy Morgan, x2671. Page 8 The UCF Report G G|I IE Through March, it's open enrollment 1TT NIVFJ^FI0! Employment i for Faculty/A&P Sick-Leave Pool opportunities Wednesday, March 9 The Faculty and A&P Sick-Leave Pool will have an open Beek Tips over Noodles enrollment priod through the month of March. Please send • UCF is an Equal Opportunity/ Veal Parmesian your application form to the Office of Academic Affairs. Should Affirmative Action Employer Turkey and Mushroom Quiche** you have any questions, please call extension 2496. Thursday, March 10 For resume of current Carved Ham TO: Dr. Frank Juge, Office of Academic Affairs openings, call Career Vegetable Quiche** Faculty and Administrative and Professional Opportunity Line, Beef Pot Pie Sick-Leave Pool Application Friday, March 11 275-2778 Seafood Quiche** Name Chicken and Dumplings Personnel Services lists the following Chinese Pepper Steak SS# Department vacancies, by title, department, minimum qualifications, annual salary range, bi-weekly * Daily Special: entree, 2 vegetables, Date of UCF Employment salary, and closing date. It is the responsibil­ dinner roll, beverage, $2.50 plus tax. ity of the applicant to successfully complete ** Special: entree, small salad, garlic I have read the procedure for the UCF Faculty and Administrative and Pro­ any required performance and/or written bread, beverage, $2.25 plus tax. fessional Sick-Leave Pool and agree to abide by its terms. The transfer of 8 exams prior to being considered for a spe­ hours of sick leave from my sick-leave account to the Sick-Leave Pool is cific job opening. For information on any hereby authorized. required exams, as well as further details on Classified these positions, contact Personnel. x2771. A Signed: _ listing of available faculty positions within This is a free service Applicant Date the SUS is available on request at the to fulltime UCF employees receptionist's desk (ADM 230). FOR SALE Antiques and household furnishings. BCC plans study trip to Africa Call 365-8755 after 6 pm. Administrative Montgomery Ward exercise bike, Brevard Community College is offer­ ley, the Masai Mara Reserve and count­ very good condition, $80. Carol x2934. ing a unique study program designed less animals in the wild, a gold mine & Professional Grey Persian (spayed) female cat, specifically for professional educators and the Premier Diamond Mine, open- orange eyes; to a good home only $50. and community members interested in air African bazaars, tribal dances, the Director, Univ. Libraries (Library). ALA accredited Call Karen x2121; after 5 pm. the art, culture, history, contemporary majestic Victoria Falls, a cruise on the Master's (or equivalent) and ten years' progres­ 699-0025. issues and beauty of Africa. Zambezi River. sively responsible library experience, including at Volkswagen Van 1974, good condi­ The 22-day trip leaves May 7, returns Program cost of $3,736 from Orlando least four years in upper-level management posi­ tion, less than 10,000 miles on rebuilt on May 28, and makes stops in Egypt, includes roundtrip airfare, first class/ tion in university library. $30,240.00-50,400.00, engine; radial tires with radial-tuned Ethiopia, Kenya, Zimbabwe and South deluxe hotels based on twin bedded $1,158.62.3/10. shocks on front, air shocks on rear; new Africa. There is an optional extension to rooms with private bath, two meals carburetor, distributor, fuel pump, Athens, Greece, at the end of the regu­ daily with all meals included while on muffler. AM/FM stereo cassette deck lar trip. safari in Kenya, guided sightseeing with Career Service Highlights of this program are: the local licensed guides, special appoint­ w/ 4 speakers. $2750. Call Jim x2771 Television Producer Director (Instructional great pyramids and sphinx at Giza, the ments, all surface transportation via days or (305) 632-7559 evenings. Resources). Graduation from high school and King "Tut" exhibition at the National bus, hotel/airport transfers, insurance, Beautiful 2/2 home in the country, seven years of experience in television production Museum in Cairo, the temples of Luxor pre-flight materials. 10 mi. from UCF; numerable extras work; or graduation from an accredited four-year and Karnak, the Valley of the Dead/ For more information, contact: Elena including M.H. on property. Kennels, college or university with major course work in Kings/Queens, a safari to Aberdare Flom, Brevard Community College (Mel­ accessory bldgs., aviary, all on IVi television production or programming and three National Park, Nanyuki, Great Rift Val­ bourne Campus), 305/254-0305, x203. acres. Priced to sell. Contact F.J., years of experience in television production work. x2850. Prefer master's, knowledge of computers, editing 1975 Plymouth Gran Fury, 4 door, HS counselors get campus updates today audio, writing and supervision helpful. power steering, power brakes, AM-FM High school counselors from UCF's 11 -county service area will be university $16,307.28-21.882.24, $624.80. 3/10. radio, air condition, automatic transmis­ guests today for meetings and tours of the campus. Bookstore Manager III (Bookstore). Graduation sion, auto speed control, w/w tires, "High School Counselor Day" will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the Student Center from an accredited four-year college or university very clean and in excellent condition. Auditorium when UCF administrators will start with updates on: new admission with major course work in merchandising and $1600.00. Call Bruce. x3410. requirements, admissions/registration process, placement testing for starting retailing, and five years of responsible experience freshmen, financial aid, minority student services and other matters pertinent to in a bookstore, two of which must have been in a ATARI VCS Game Console with 4 counselors. supervisory capacity. Progressively responsible games (Missle Command, Pac Man, Representatives of the individual colleges during the day will spell out signifi­ experience in sales or retail management may be Asteroids, Combat). 2 months old, cant procedures and services of their particular areas. substituted on a year-for-year basis for the hardly used. $175 or best offer. Call Tours of the campus are scheduled to lead into the lunch hour. required college training. $17,330.40-23,343.84, Jennifer, x2277. $664.00. 3/10.

FOR RENT Pacemakers topic Symphony's concert Business Manager (Auxiliary Svcs). Graduation Room w/bath in Oviedo; quiet set­ of heart lecturer tonight ends season from an accredited four-year college or university ting, kitchen privl. $130 mo. plus and two years of fiscal or administrative expe­ Geoffrey O. Hartzler, a clinical asso­ The UCF Symphony Orchestra, under 1 st/last month's rent, 1/3 utilities. rience. Responsible experience in a fiscal or ciate professor of medicine at University the direction of John C. Whitney, will x2231 or 365-7244 evng. administrative area may be substituted on a year- present its final concert of the season at of Missouri, is the Florida Heart Insti­ for-year basis for the required college training. WANTED 8 p.m. today in the Edyth Bush Audi­ tute Lecture Series featured speaker at Prefer background or experience in retail sales or Baby Furniture, Washer and/or torium. Tickets are $3 and will be avail­ 7 p.m. today in the John Young Science accounting. Written exam. $17,330.40- able at the door. Dryer for young couple and baby. Reas­ Center, 810 East Rollins. 23,343.84, $664.00.3/10. The featured work on the program onable, in good condition. Phone 277- Pacemakers will be the topic of Dr. Secretary III (Athletics, 2 positions). Graduation will be "Symphony No. 2" by Charles 7697, leave name and number. Hartzler's lecture. This free lecture is from high school and two years of secretarial sponsored by the Florida Heart Institute Ives. Other works to be presented are and/or clerical experience. Written and typing Good Home for female Irish setter; and an educational grant from Medtron- "Toccata" by Frescobaldi, "In the exams. Shorthand preferred. One position is con­ six years old, house-trained, registered; ics, Inc. For more information, call Steppes of Central Asia," by Borodin, tract and grant. $9,437.76-12,193.92, $361.60. free. Phone x2798 ro 671 -4691. Florida Heart Institute (897-1575). and Three Dances from "The Bartered 3/10 Bride." Teacher Aide (Creative School for Children). Gra­ The UCF Report duation from high school. Prefer's experience and The UCF Report is the University of Central training with young children. $7,475.04-8,978.40, Florida's official publication, whose purpose OFFICIAL To Spotlight the UCF $286.40.3/10. is to inform the University community Storekeeper II (Physical Plant). Graduation from through announcements, official memoranda BALLOT Employee of the Month high school and three years of clerical experience, and items of general interest. Publication two of which must have been in receiving, storing, and announcements and official memoranda I nominate to be shipping and issuing store and/or laboratory about University policy and procedures in UCF SPOTLIGHT EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTH for APRIL. (Nominee must The UCF Report constitutes official notice to items. Written exam. $10,419.12-13,572.00, faculty and staff. The UCF Report is a weekly have been employed for at least one year.) Faculty and A&P personnel may also $399.20.3/10. nominate a career service person for this award. Rationale for nomination: (i.e. publication most of the regular academic Illustrator II (Print Shop). Graduation from high job performance, dependability, attitude, etc.): year and biweekly during the summer school and two years of experience in commercial sessions, at a cost of $180 per issue, or 7.5 art or illustrating work. Prefer experience with cents per copy, paid for by the Office of Comp/Edit 5810 phototypesetter, design and lay­ Public Affairs, ADM 395-J, x2504. out. $11,609.28-15,242.40, $444.80. 3/17. Copy submitted on or before Thursday noon of the week before publication receives handling and space priority. Copy Have you noticed is accepted after this deadline but is That the U.S. Postal Service has subject to editing or delay until the advanced the times for pickup of mail succeeding publication date. from the drop box outside the west Editor: Bill Averill Cut out ballot and return to Dorris Cannon, ADM 230, by March 11 entrance to the Administration Build­ Photographer: Tom Netsel ing? Times now are 8:15 a.m. and Typographer: Belinda Glennon Signed: 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. & Assistance of: UCF Print Shop L.