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Central Florida Future University Archives

4-8-1983

Central Florida Future, Vol. 15 No. 26, April 8, 1983

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Recommended Citation "Central Florida Future, Vol. 15 No. 26, April 8, 1983" (1983). Central Florida Future. 504. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/centralfloridafuture/504 INSIDE D Discussing incest and sexual abuse, seepage3 . D Trivia Quiz: The lads from Liv~ FUTURE pool, see Encore, page 14 D DeFranco: A swinging star, see Serving the UCF Community for 15 Years Sport.sweek, page 17

Vol 15 No.26 April 8, 1983 Two-thirds of UCF summer courses chopped by Donna Howell } Bolte, associate vice president of said. "Faculty members in our depart­ Last summer the college offered Future news Academic Affairs Tuesday, said. ment will be limited to teaching one· about half the courses available In the most severe funding cut in course eacq in the summer, therefore during spring and fall semesters. UCF's history, the state ha~ slashed According to communication. ·earning only about 35 percent of their Dr. Timothy O'Keefe, a com­ $1.62 million from the university's department chairman Dr. Raymond regular salaries during those months.'' munications professor, said his 1982-83 education and general budget Buchanan, the College of Arts and feature writing class was unable to limiting summer courses, department Sciences "appears to have been hit ''Students are understandably , send their assignments to local expenditures and faculty employ­ harder" and is "virtually out of disappointed, too, Buchanan said. If newspapers as in previous years, ment. money." UCF continues to require students to because the department lacked the affected all colleges within the univer­ This summer, one-third of the cour­ take nine summer credit hours, a supplies to do so. ·"It could have sity, primarily engineering and ses usually available during regular revised commitment to summer helped the students' careers by business administration, Dr. John R. semesters will be offered, Buchanan courses must be made.''. Budget, page 10 Students' names to be called at spring Commencement

by Donna Howell ''The committee decided in­ Future news dividual recognition was too impor­ tant to give up," he said. "The only Sailing Graduating seniors will be change I know of is that graduate recognized individually at com­ students will receive their degrees A student mencement ceremonies despite pro­ before undergraduates.'' caught some · posals to cut it out of the program, waves in UCF's according to a university commence­ Vice president of Student Affairs reflecting pond ment committee spokesman. LeVester Tubbs said the committee this week with considered cutting out the reading the sunny weath-. The committee had debated of individuals' names because last er conditions whether to shorten the two- to three­ year students left the ceremony that prevailed. hour ceremony by not calling after their names were called. About graduating seniors up to a platform one-third of the original par­ to receive diplomas, public affairs ticipants were-left at the end of tlie director C. Barth Engert said. ceremony, he· said. · Graduation excercises will be held Various deans and administrative at· 8 a.m. April 29 between the staff comprise the committee. Its Humanities and Fine Arts and purpose is to review commencement Education buildings at UCF. • procedure and make· recommenda­ According to a university official, tions to university President Trevor about 1,300 students are expected Colbourn. to graduate this spring.

Stude_nt proposes project to aid ex-convicts

by Mike West when it was needed. Ex-convicts were media at UCF and is attempting to Next would be to form a committee ' Contributing writer allowed to stay at th~ house for up to start what he rans a "core group" in which made specific plans for the UCF students may someday be able six months and didn't have to pay Orlando. He ~ said he wants to "get program, Sheafer said. to help criminaJs in their transition rent until they found a job. them rolling'' in a year, before he The first programs of the group from jail to society, according to Rick According to Sheafer, there were ·leaves for graduate school. would involve visiting prisoners soon Sheafer, a UCF student interested in only three basic rules at Dismas Sheafer said that establishing a to be released and finding pen pals for starting a prison project at the House: "NQ drinking, no sex and no . home in Orlando like Dismas House is inmates, he said. universjty. drugs.'' The ex-offenders were also quite a few years down the road, but Sheafer sai(.l students could volun­ While a student at Vanderbilt assigned chores to do around the added that other steps can be started teer but that some kind of screening University in Nashville, Tenn., house and they always had to be there · to institute this kind of program. would have to be done. "Prison of­ Sheafer was involved in a program for supper, Sheafer said. According tQ Sheafer, the first and ficials are very strict as to who they designed to help criminals adjust to The primary: purpose of the Prison largest step in starting such a let in to visit,'' Sheafer said. free society. · Project Program is to keep ex-cons program is getting the support of Terry James, director of corrections The prison project program set up a from slipping back into their old peer locals who have some weight in the with the Orange County Sheriff's home called the Dismas House groups, Sheafer said. It's the peer community. Department, said that volunteer where about eight or nine volunteer groups that get people in trouble the "If I can get bankers, civic leaders programs are fine, but that ex­ students lived with ex-offenders. first time .and usually gets them in like the mayor, some local law firms, prisoners need an immediate place to The volunteers helped ex-convicts trouble again, he said. clergy, and university professors to stay ·and a job more than counseling.. find jobs and provided counseling Sheafer is majoring in educational lend their nanies to the program, half James commented that sometimes the battle .will be won,'' Sheafer said. volunteers become apathetic. "A lot So. far, he said, the UCF Catholic of people think they want to be in­ High.est paid UCF pro~essors . campus ministry has been very sup­ volved but only a few really want to portive by lending him office space, a work,'' he said. post office box, stationery and a James Said another problem with Eight out of the ten highest paid professors at UCF work in the Engineering phone to use to start his program. students being involved is that they and Computer Science colleges, according to the university's 1982- 83 budget. "The har'Qest .people to get support graduate and move on, and the tur­ Dr. Amar Mukhopadhyay, computer science, is the highest paid professor at from are pris<>n officials-they're nover has an adverse effect on the ex­ $50,541. Two professors who ranked in the top ten in &alarles that were not always suspicious when someone convicts in the program. f:ro~ the engineering oi: computer science departments were Dr. Louis Boone wants to -do something good for Salaries, page 7 prisoners,'' he said Prieon, pap 10 Page2 Future-April 8, 1983

Florida Power offering savings ·on bills Career development seminar offered If you are a homeowner and a Florida Power Corp. customer, you may be Career Connection, a seminar to help communications-oriented people im- eligible to receive a $3.50 to $17 monthly break on your electric bills. A prove on the job and prepare for career development, will be held from 9 a.m. to representative from the company will be on campus Monday through Friday to 3 p.m. April 23 at the Hilton Inn-Florida Center on 7400 International Drive. explain an energy management program. Topics include resume writing, preparing for an interview, career investment For those who sign up for the program, the company will install free radio , dressing and nutrition on the job. . , receivers on certain home appliances that interrupt power during peak demand Registration deadline is April 20. For further information, call Leslie periods. . Brewington at 840-2386. The.representative will be at the Student Center April 11 and 12, in the EducationBuildinglobbyandAprill3andl4,intheAdministration Rides available for religious'crusade Building lobby April 15 from~ a.m. to 4 p.m. UCF's Baptist Campus Ministry is providing free rides to the Billy Graham crusade at the Tangerine Bowl on Sunday at 3 p.m., and Monday through Thursday at 6:15 p.m. Two v.ans will be parked at the circle by the old dorms . Peer advisers needed for '83-'84. .·· Applications for the 1983-84 Academic Peer Advisement team are available in AD 145. Requirements include a 2.5 overall GPA, availability during the UCF sponsors study tour to Britain. summer semester for training, and interest in assisting faculty with the ad­ A summer study tour of England, Scotland and Wales will leave Orlando on visement of entering freshmen. For further information, Call Dr. Fisher, x- June 27 under the direction of Doctors Bill and Mary Esler. · 2811. Esler, a department chairman in UCF's College of Education, and his wife, a teacher with Orange County schools, organized the tour as a cooperative effort Honor society members asked to vote of UCF and Bulmershe College of Higher Education in Reading, located 35 All active members of UCF's national honor society, Phi Kappa Phi, are miles southwest of London. . eligible to vote on proposed amendments to the chapter bylaws. Voting will be While at Bulmershe, the group will on May 12 at 11 a.m. in the admissions conference room, AD 168. Members attend lectures and seminai-s by the may pick up a copy of the proposed amend,ments at AD 282. college faculty and visit English schools. There also will be day trips to .International club election to be held museums and historic sights in London Elections for the Association of International Students will be held on and the Thames Valley. Following Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the breezeway across from the snack bar. the first two weeks, the group will Students wishing to write in candidates may do so on election day. If board a bus for six days to tour necessary, runoff elections will be held the following WE • at the same place England, ~otland and Wales before and time. returning to the United States on July 17 . Thecostofthestudytouris$1,995 . . Sinkholes subject of slideshow Tom Netsel/contrlbutlng photographer UCF geologist Frank Kujawa will present a program on sinkholes in Central per person, which cover~ all·charges Florida on April 12. except tuition fees for two optional Nile queen Kujawa, who has studied the causes and effects of sinkholes for years, will courses to be taught by the Eslers. illustrate the program with diagrams and slides showing both recent and Spaces are limited, and interested UCF's International Student historic collapses. persons should contact Esler as soon Association provided Eastern ent.er- The one-hour program will be at 3:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the Engineering as possible at 275-2428 for additional tainment at a dinner April 1. Auditorium Room 360. Everyone may attend. information. Deadline on applications . is April 28. · j~·······································••¥¥•••··~ WEWANTYOU .. j ~ ~ - ~ Atthe UCF ~ •· ~ PLAYBOY PARTY ~ . i Saturday, April 16, 8pm i l ~ . - ~ - ~ at S'fo"4~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i- OPEN BAR i i All you can drink i ~ ~ i Sponsored by:· . t ~ ~ i ~4. . Coors t ~ ~ i Mitchell's t ~ FORMAL WEAR - • ~ ~ i Presented by: i ·l ALPHA TAU OMEGA~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1 Future-April 8, 1983 Page3 Speaker talks of incest, molestation

by Frances Brady "In New York City, one out of blamed her for this because as a Contrlbu11ng writer three females before the age of 18 is child, she came to him for comfort · sexually molested at home," she and love. She said she had only Incest is one of the most signifi­ said. Brady added that they are 1 Y2 years of "normal adolescence" cant, yet missed problems in today'.s usually under 12 years of age. Brady until her father cut her off from peer society, according to Katherine said incest h11s been,. a taboo subject groups and all normal social and Brady, an incest survivor. "We live until recently; now people are emotional development. in a culture that says incest is a pro­ becoming more aware of it as a real "He isolated me. He wanted me blem but we don't act upon that problem. for himself," Brady said. .. . . threat,'' she said. Brady was first victimized by her Brady considers her incestual rela­ Brady, an author and lecturer on father at age eight, when he began tionship "a form of p~ychological incest and se~al abuse, spoke ~o fondling her. She said that at the rape," The psychological part was about 45 students in the Student time she felt abandoned and the most injurious but the physical Center Auditorium Tuesday night. betrayed because her mother had damage really took its toll, she said. According to social service agen­ gone back to work. "I just wai:ited "It took me 27 years to.get over it. I cies, one out of 10 families ex­ comforting from my father," ~she don't consider myself a victim of periences incest. Brady said the said. rape. I'm a survivor." ~therine Brady · estimate is low. "We've been brak­ Incest perpetrators "look for the Brady wrote a book about her ex­ ing silence about incest for the past weakest link in the family, Brady periences titled "Father's Day." "I ' Participants from the audience five years but we've got a lot of work said, and she was a very passive couldn't speak out against my engaged in a sexual harassment ex­ • to do," she said. child. ''I was powerl~ss and hated to father so I began writing about it," ercise in which a female volunteer She cited a University of New make a fuss" abqut our relationship, she said. "It made it real when I played a victlm, and a male Hampshire professor as saying one she said. wrote it down," Brady added. The volunteer played a perpetrator. Par­ of five women and one out of 11 men Intercourse between the two book also served as a catharsis, she ticipants. said the exercise helped . is sexually victimized at home .. began in. her early teens.· Her father s8.id. · Inces.t, page 16 Library building Oddition to be.finished· by September

• by Bruce Y orra chitect and this office we are pretty Future news close to schedule," Waters said.

The expansion of the UCF library Construction of the $7.5 million is running close to schedule and expansion began in May of last year. shQulQ be ~ompleted by the end of Completion of the entire project,

SeptemberI according to Construc­ which· includes renovating the tion Superintendent Jim Waters. library, is slated for June 1984. The ''Through efficiency and coordina­ renovation of the library's current tion between the contractor, ar- facilities will take an additional 10

<. __ ~rary, page 10

Jello JI.imp Contest Dis·c·Golf Tournament to benefit: .. • --April·11 The Special Oymplcs SC Green 12noon Apr 16 & 17 9ani For more info: Call Kurt 275-4310 or Steve 282-4642 Student omecoming Logo Talent Contest : . Showca$e Comedy Oriented Theme . Apr .12 8:00pm "Live From UCF'.' University Dining Room Submit Entries by April 29 SC 215 - in sketch form Regretfully, the Gong Show scheduled for Apr 8 at For more Info: 275-2611 Lk Claire was cancelled due to lack of participation. Prizes: 2 free passes all Homecoming Activities-- P~ge4 ~ture ..April 8, ·1983 ..... -- --·--J.. =- .. _.. _. _.:. An artful mix

The UCF Puerto Rican & American Club and the Student Art Society exhibited · sculptures, paintings, photographs and graphic designs in the Spring Art Festival held on cam­ pus last week.

~-H. MPIAN Educational Center There IS a difference!!! Course Class Starting GRE Apr14 LSAT Apr30 GMAT May1 Senate notebook Four pieces of legislatiofl 2238 Winter Woods Blvd. Winter Park, Florida 32792 San Jose Exec. Center passed·in quick session • We reserve the right to cancel any class for by Roger Simmons just over an hour. which there Is Insufficient enrollment Coll for details Future news Senators Sheri Harriman and Luci Days, Evening, or Weekends Johnson co-introduced a · bill 678·8400 UCF's student senate had a short, allocating $980 for members of the · Centers In More Than 80 Major US Cities but · productiv~ session March 31 UCF Marketmg Club to attend a Puerto Rico Toronto Conado & Lu ano Switzerland passing four pieces of legislation ~ conference in Chicago April 7 -10. 6 The money will be used for registra· · ~ tion fees. ~ In discussion of the bill, the senate ~ praised the club for its many ~ charitable activities, and passed the ~ bill unanimously. 8 The senate passed a bill which ~ would allow sena'tors to keep their ~ senate notebooks. Sen. Monty Knox ~ argues that new notebooks must be ~ bought every year and that there ~ would be no harm in letting the ~ legislators keep their official senate ~ papers and notebooks. g;i Sen. Mary MacAi:thur introduced .. / . ~ a resolution calling for the installa­ ~ tion of lights on walls next to the .§: east and west stairways of the a' Humanities and Fine Arts Building. ~ MacArthur pointed ... out that the ~ - dark stairways are dangerous at i night. The resolution. passed . J The senate also passed a bill, in· si. troduced by Sen. Robert Burkett, ; that would allow the Activity and ~ Service Fee committee to be granted ~ additional time to complete the ASF ! budget. Senate Pro Tempore Dave · Kiser called the action ''basically necessary.'' The committee has until .April 14 to finish its work.

. . ~----. ------n't be topped. i • ... - . T-shirt offer ca rmenand I ThlS .ow' This red & white T-sf h510r~/01~ornbed cotton ·smadeo n . • . women, 'ra Ian sleeves. . 0 r der. t led witll three athletic s~np~ST~~h1~te(nogcash, please) to. I and 500/o polyester, s br money order for $4.9 pe Please se~d aJ:C,~~ T-shirt otter . . seagram7s257 oept 249 po Box , · Lubbock, Texas 79491 • tJ"easePnnn

NameCollege-~=------=---== -==------__,___------~~= Correction Ann Ransom/Future Address- Zip---­ State ------ucFB54 Last week the Future credited City------Eileen Samelson with the above pie· Adult sizes only. Specify quantity. ture. The photo was actually t.aken by . T-shirt@ $4.95 ea., s_ M_ L_ XL_ Amount Enclosed $ . I Offer expires January 31. 1984. No purchase necessary. New York residents add B.25% sales tax . Please allow 4 to 6 "!'eeks for shipment. .I Ann Ransom. The Future regrets the .. ------error. Future-April 8, 1983 Page5

. . To All who participated in

the recent SG Elections,

• NK YOU

Sincerely, Bleen Samelson/Future It's a kick

Two karat.e experts give a demonstration April 1 on campus to int.erest.ed Mark Geary student.a.

• JOIN the SEARCH

Today's technology may represent only a feeble glimpse into the possible.

That's why we· are probing the frontiers of science and technology with basic and applied research at sophisticated levels. Every These investigations are in high energy laser optics; infrared electro­ optical systems and fiber optics; microprocessors and semiconductor applications; semicustbm IC/hybrid circuits; energy conversion; materials Monday technology; fluid dynamics; CAD/CAM and robotics; industrial and military systems analysis; scientific/commercial programming; instrument research; ... other areas: New Wave· Maybe you can help. So let's talk when we visit your campus. RockNRoll Better yet, act now. Just write today to Mr. F. M. Marcin at the United Technologies Research Center, Silver Lane, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108. Op!!nings in Florida and Connecticut

UNITED TECHNOLOGIES RESEARCH mCENTER An Equal Opportunity Employer 100 Minutes of $1.00 Heineken Fr.om 9:00 For Information· Call 295-3751

NOT VALID FOR SPl!iCIAL EVENTS Page_!_ , Future-April 8, 1983 · · ·.a;!'. a a ••• ai a A Aj w a a H. H H Ha a a•. w M 1M sl .• ii: M ., 1 • HotSandwiches . .: . ·· ). _ . . ·· · , ·._. M~~da-r ·. · CARRIE ·NJ\ TJQJu'S ··· Special DiScounts 25¢Draft .. · Day&~ite 81.75PitCher8-11 · . .· . T-AVERN- -"~ , Friday "- - Tu~day . · 81.00 off any We now have -' All Imports 81.00 Pitcher 8-11 long neck Saturday. · W~esday Buds. Michelob& Happy Hour 8-11 Michelob lite D-J&Dandng 85¢ Bottles *Speeiat:·Happy Hour Sunday Thursday 82.50 Pitchers 40¢ Draft '. AllDay&Nite ·Ladies Nite Free Draft All Imports 81.00 20¢ off all cans For Ladies ·8-10 M-F 12 til 7 · and bottles D-J & Dancing (Fairway Shopping Center) 11636 E. Highway 50 273·4297 50¢ off~ pitchers ' '

· For more infe>rmation,

call Dot at the

FUTURE Buslne$s

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Personal Injury and.WrongfulDeat Defective Product Injuries Criminal Law

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16 West Pine Street . ' Orlando, Florida (305) 841-0342 Page7 ... Sa1aries ------1rompage1 from the marketing department and Dr. Bernard Ostle from mathematics and PROFESSIONAL RESUM~ DESIGN statistics. Interview skills -training to ensure hiring The university's budget is public information and is on reserve in the UCF Cover letters for professional acceptance library. Proficient typing & word processing services Including term papers and theses Career assessment testing, scoring and Interpretation All salarie~ are based on a 39 week pay period. Role playing & video tape counseling to practice voice, posture & body language Job placement -tee paid and non-fee paid 10 highest paid university professors ·Llrlando · "An Investment In your future." • 1982-'83 lE_.nsultants, inc . /894-7726 . -~ .. ..- Salary is figtired on a full-time basis, or 39 weeks. The in­ 2111 E. Michigan Ave., Suite 126, Orlando, Fl. 32806 formation was gathered from UCF's 1982-83 · operating · budget, on file at the Library. Name Department Salary NewCo~cept 1. Mukhopadhyay, Dr. Amar Computer Sciences $ ~0,541 Now,Servlnl 2.Doering,Dr.R.obert Industrial Engineering $ 46,341 • Orders to go 3. Yousef, Dr. Yousef A. Civil Engineering $ 46,341 Beer&Wine 4. Hughes, Dr. Charles Computer Sciences $ 45,545 Home Made Spincah Salads Soups 5. Towle, Dr. Herbert Electrical Engineering $ 43,991 Chicken & Fish 6. Biegel, Dr. ~ohn Industrial Engineering $ 43,235 Drive 11tru Sandwiches Window - 7. Gambrell, Dr. C. B. Industrial Engineering $ 43,235 678-9527 • 8. Boone, Dr. Louis Marketing $ 42,492 T1eoS.ll• Open Fri & Sat .Til2am 9. Brooks, Dr. George Industrial Engineering $ 42,492 443 N. Semoran Blvd. 10. Ostle, Dr. Bernard 'Mathematics & Statistics $ 42,492 Corner 436 and Aloma Orlando calls can be made free from UCF by Donna Howell Future news

UCF stUdents .can now make free calls to Orlando from seven campus phones formerly restrict.ed ~o on­ OUR.BOOK campus use. Orlando calls can be made from the phones by dialing nine, then the desired number. The phones are CAN'T HELP YOUR • located in the Library, Administra­ tion, Engineering, Chemistry, Stu­ dent Union, Student Center and GRADES, Classroom buildings. Phones were located also in the Biological Sciences and Fbe Arts BUT IT CAN HELP YOU buildings, but are damaged and would cost $60 to $100 to rep~ir : ·The student senate. pays $18 a month to maintain each phone, ac­ STAY IN SCHO.OL. cording to UCF., communications coordinator Jeanne Kubiki.

Sen. Rob Rotter, a supporter of While you're rrying ttl make ir rhrnugh the original senate bill to fund the school, rhe last thing you neeJ co worry ahuur i · phones, said it would take "a term how to pay rhe hil ls. o srop -wmrying anJ ger rhe money you need wirh

• Page8 A free exchange· Letter Policy . I T6 60 N1t( ot1l\eM 10 iNllZot>JC( u.s of ideas on the Letters to the editor must ~ n"""L)~ a. t ~Q Jt 1 1 1 FORUM is_ sues of. the day be delivered to the Future by AT QQ,'- 6ru-t.V ,., ' 10 ". ru .JP "11000 Future-April 8, 1983· 5p.m. on the M<;>nday before wol21'"H ~ '1U 'Tl 01\) I . (YPE:~T ])OS~ publication. Letters must be Li tt..-r ·ucA,-r· a.I "'-°'S -"".\.,,1 1 '""llf\.\APD IXO typed, double spaced on a .. nO~ I v <... ~ 1 . ~ •i.: \... • l '~ . 60-spaced line and should Change in priorities? not be more than 250 w.ords in length. All letters must be U.S. District Court Judge John Pratt told Florida and signed with the author's five other states this week that they must clean up their phone number_ to be con­ desegregation act or lose federal funds. The order raises _sidered for publication. some interesting questions and some tough problem·s. Under certain cir­ Florida was listed along with Arkansas, Georgia, cumstances, writers' naines Oklahoma, Virginia and North Carolina as states who will be witheld upon request: have not integrat0d their university·systems fast enough. All letters are · subject · to All the states have had five-year integration plans since editing. · 1978 and, according to Pratt, the plans haven't worked. Some letters may be Pratt issued an order to the Reagan administration· to designated. as guest deny these states funding if they do not submit workable editorials at the ·editor's plans for desegregation by June 30. . discretion, with the permis­ The ruling is a good one in that it recognizes a problem sion of the writer. All sub­ that certainly exists. The black/white ratio of Florida's mitted material becomes the . schools is shamefully low. It nowhere near approaches copyrighted property of the the percentage of blacks living in the state. If one argues Future newspaper. that a lower percentage of blacks are capapble of attending . .college, one oruy makes .an Bl'gument for desegregation. It is society's obligation to educate its members. The ' Guest editorial .py 'roger simmons low percentage of black college students proves we have failed that obligation. A problem arises, however, when you mention the cost of desegregation and who will pay for it. Funds for educa­ Senate should revise statutes to protect electiol) credibility tion are tight in Florida right now. If new funds are to be .directed toward desegregation, something else will have The election of·Sen. Mark too vague. turnout tha.n about having a to be cut. Geary as UCF' s next stu· Although the Brevard in­ true democratic election. No In effect, we may have to lower the quality of our , dent body president capped . cident occurred without af­ matter what some students educational system to allow for the induction of those off what had been one of the· fecting the outcome of the may say, when a poll worker who were unlawfully denied th~ir rights in the past. cleanest elections in Student election, something needs to direct~ you to campaign That is a hard pill to swallow, but .swallow it we must. Government history. But be done ·now to clarify and literature which shows only the election was not without change statutes be.fore one side of an issue,. your its mishaps. another election is held. vote ha~ been influenced. Watt now? After receiving a com­ U.S. Secretary of the Interior James Watt has done it plaint about vote influenc­ The student senate should · The student senate should again. Somehow, the man manages. to infuriate just about ing taking place at the amend present election also cl~ify the statutes everyone anytime he opens his mouth. Brevard area campus, Elec­ statutes ·to require that regarding the actual voting This time it was our nation's youth, the Viee President of tions Commissioner Richard members of ·the League of process on area campuses. the United States and a key number of President Reagan's Stocking and I were stunned Women Voters supervise aii Specific guidelines must be personal staff. - to find the allegations were elections on all UCF cam- given regarding the place­ Watt, whose dep~ment is in charge of planning the true. . puses, as they did on the ment and location of cam­ Fourth of July concert on the mall at the capitol, · was . main .campus and ~t the paign literatur~ and what ac­ quoted last week as saying groups like. the Beach Boys and After witnessing a South Orlando Center. tion should be taken when the Grass Roots attracted "the wrong element" of° listeners. Brevard SG A official direct vote influencing occurs. Pot smokers and the like. numerous students to cam· This appears to be the on· Watt didn't mention the bands by name, but the im· paign literature before they ly way to ensure that an im­ If UCF's .student plication was clear enough to insult B~ch Boy fans George were allowed to vote, and partial, non-biased group legislators fail to implement Bush and Michael Deaver when he announced that after I personally was told · will provide a proper at­ these changes in the election "family" entertainer Wayne·Newton will be featured ·this who to vote for after posing mosphere -where voting can statutes, then surely ques­ year. a very vague question to a take place. tions and allegations will Watt is a powerful man. He has the power to insult the in- poll worker, it was obvious continue to plague UCF elec· telligence of an entire nation. Michael E. Griffin - that some major revisions in This would also stop the tions-not to mention the the SG election statutes hav~ influencing of voters by fact that these corrupt votes Editor in Chief to be made. over-zealous SG A officials ' may place a candidate into At a meeting of the elec­ who are more concerned an office for which he was tion commission, members about voter awareness and not democratically elected. Individualism is rather like innocence; there must be could not decide what action_ something unconscious about it. should be taken at Brevard Louis Kron~nberger Roger Simmons is the Future's Student .Government . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii because statutes covering voting at area campuses are reporter. The FUTURE Founded in 1968 by the students of the University of Central Florida From.our readers

Michael E. Griffm Editor in Chief Futile provided the "Spring Break'' students never got

Michael J. West Kathleen G. Foronda Editor: in light of all this confusion, monotony ot everyday col­ Business Manager Managing Editor As a Junior at UCF, I am I would like to take this op­ lege life. well aware of how rough a· portunity to personally ex­ I realize a utopirui situa­ LeeLemer Julie D. Norris college schedule can be. press my thanks to you and tion is virtually impossible News Editor Sports Editor Classes, homework, all of the staff of the Future in today's society; however, deadlines and work all com­ who, I'm sure, dedicate a lot I feel that if we notice ·the Lawrence H. Thompson Pamela Gimson bine to make life very dif­ of their time and effort in small, enjoyable things such Entertainment Editor Photography Editor ficult for me and p_robably publishing the weekly as this, rather than finding many others. issues. faults 'in life, our world Robert B. Molpus . Dorothy H. Case Also, I would like to let would be a much better Procbrction Manager Sales Manager With all of this pressure, I you know how humorous place. Offices Located on Libra Drive can understand how hard it and entertaining I thought Once again, I express my F.clitoral: (305)275-2601 Business: (306)275-2865 is for many people to have last week's issue of the thanks to the editor and the an optimistic outlook on life. Futile was. In light of a long entire staff of the paper for Thi& p"°i.blic document w~ promulgated at an annual cmt of $~In? or 5.9 cent! per copy to in­ Budget cuts, increasing tui­ semester an~ a very short their consistently fine work. (onn the university community. Annual adverruing revernu of 166,560 ~frays 63.9 percmt of the annuaJ cmt. tion and an administrative - spring break, I see it as a This university truly has a OpinicM upreued in the FUTURE are tltase of the editnr OT the writer and are not necessarily bureaucracy always seem to humorous tool w hlch the newspaper it can be proud thm• of the University Board of Publications or the adminiatration. stand in the way of a staff of the Future used very The FUTURE is funded partially through the Activity a.nd Service Fee allocated by Student of. Goilemrnent of~ University ofCentralPlorida.. pleasurable college life. So, well to help - break the Craig Parks Future-April 8, 1983 Page9 University of Delaware Black Student Union brings .students together National On-Campus Report Special to the Future students and 250 white from white students who said listing its name and the event mixer. That helped break students danced to funk, pop they wanted to attend regular at the top and the other three down some barriers before the Like their peers on many and disco music, socializing in BSU dances but felt too un­ co-sponsors at the bottom. dance started, Glymph said. other campuses, University a relaxed atmosphere. in comfortable. Glymph decided The BSU line up the enter­ He was pleased by ooth the of Delaware students prac­ which both groups felt com­ t.o bring white student groups tainment, including a disc attendance and the at­ ticed a kind of voluntary fortable. Its creator, Kelvin in as co-sponsors of a dance, jockey and a musical group it mosphere of the dance. "I segregation. Whites and Glymph, thinks the d~sco choosing the Theta Chi had hired in the past, but ad­ think white students will feel blacks weren't unfriendly, but helped break down social fraternity, the Alpha Chi ding more pop-type music to more comfortable attending • they usually socialized within barriers between the racial Omega sorority and the the evening. BSU events in the future," he their own groups. groups. Housing and Residence Life says. And the response will That is, until recently. Glymph, president of the office~ PriQr to the dance, the probably dictate another At the first Ebony and Black Student Union at Each spon~oring group sponsoring groups socialized jointly sponsored dance as Ivory Disco, about 150 black Delaware, frequently heard produced its own fliers, at a typical two-keg fraternity well. More letters Spanky by Carl McKnight -

Vietnamese deserver~ l~~CoLD:BWl-M\D S, N£WLy C..vr (;;llA5S, Editor: . This exodus by sea supris­ C~~I\)(, TABBACW, The Vietnamese student ed the world. The United Af\)D u,\)V~llfvN£n.y... community at UCF is enrag­ States and other free coun­ ed by the letter written by tries came to help resettle Pancho Ramos Guerrero these refugees. We ·Viet­ (Not all Vietnamese students namese are deeply thankful deserve American education, to the people and govern­ Future Feb. 25.) ments of these benevolent Even though he specificai­ countries. ly mentioned Hung . The The Vietnamese American Nguyen in his letter, he also Student Association wel~omes offended the Vietnamese Guerero to our organization community at UCF as well for a discussion to p:romote a Editor: Playboy centerfold onto a down to is the fact that I as millions of Vietnamese discussion to promote a My special thanks to Bill piece of cypress wood back-· was offended by what I saw refugees all over the world. more comprehensive and ac­ Brown, dean of students, for ing is .stretching the defini­ not only for myself, but also The Vietnamese refugees curate understanding of his prompt action in remov­ tion of art a little too far. for my girlfriend and all the sacrificed and left their the Vietnamese people, a ing what I, and I'm sure I could argue on the other girls on campus who beloved country by kind and hospitable people others, thought was por­ grounds that this material had to be exposed to such primitive means to avoid with a culture of 4,000 years nographic material from the was in plain view of many "art." Communism from the very and a long history of strug­ Student Center Green high school students and I hope that by speaking up moment the Communists gle for independence and March 30. children that are frequently now, stricter guidelines will took power. They disregard­ freedom. I realize that in many seen visiting our campus. be set in the future as to ed all dangers and their lives cases there exists a fine line And I could also argue that what is viewed as proper and in exchange for freedom. On Tan Van Le between pornography and such material is no longer decent for all. their way, millions perished President art, but I believe that to ·accessible on our library Roger Barnes silently in the deep sea. . . VASA laminate an enlarged shelves. But· what it boils

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U.S CITIZENSHIP REQUIRED - AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Page 10 Future-April 8, 1983 1ibrary------frompage3 · Epileptic student injured during seizure

months, Waters said. · department. That portion of the pro- A UCF student is being treated for minor skull fractures after injuring him­ "The expansion program now ject will be completed next month. self during an epileptic seizure in front of the Education Building Monday.. underway will take us 10to15_years Materials will be shuffled around Rayinond Steadman, a 39-year-old interdisciplinary studies major, was aided before we fill up again,'' Library between the old and new buildings by paramedics and later transported t.o Florida Hospital in Orlando. Director Lynn Walker said. until the construction and renova- Dr. Chester Thompson, Stead.men's physician, said that Steadman's right "We were only seating 5 percent tion is finished. - eye is swollen shut as a result of the fractures, and that Steadman will be of the 14,000 ~tudents enrolled at State funds have paid for the hospitalized for anot~er week after surgery Thursday. , the university · and the expansion entire project, Walker said. will~~~~~~~··~ ~~~~~~T;;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ said. complaints about the nQise, walker Ill a I I said "most people have been very 1 VISA 1 Mos1etC

University of Central Florida's SOUTH ORLANDO CAMPUS (SOC)

. 8ss~o881

Time wise • SOC is closer. to students in yellow area (59C) than .the main campus is! Consider ~raffic, 1-4, EfW Expressway, di$tance ... e.g. save 10 minutes from Altamente Sp~ngs

SOUTH ORLANDO CAMPUS 7300 Lake Ellenor Drive Ph.855-0881 In Orlando Central Park -On South U.S. 441 . Dr. R.C. HARDEN, DIRECTOR

. . · TAKE ADV ANT AGE OF THE REDUCED SUMMER TUITION FEES

*To ensure your place in these courses, REGISTER for them NOW by PHONE to SOC (855· 0881) - 10-5 any day. You then register for Main Campus Courses at your scheduled appoint­ ment time by going to the Problem Table.

..IC =:!)C"'IC'" =~-11c;.=~"'llCr =::::>4 ..rtc .. =::::>c .. SUMMER 19&a~tc:=. ~..:IC .. =:::>tw:ICi11-=~-:1e.. =~w11e .. =::=ic"'

REG SEM KEY PFX NO SEC HRS COURSE TITLE . DAY TIME May9 -A -Ju-ne 1_7 · 1092 MAC 1104 51 3 College Algebra M~T-W·R 6-8 pm June 20 • B· July 29 2029 STA 2014 51 3 Prlnclples of Statistics M·T·W·R 6·8 pm May9 -C. J~ly29

3118 MAR ·3023 51 3. Marketing T·R 6-9 pm REGISTER NOW .BY PHONE 855-0881

. . VOCATIONAL EDUCATION AND GRADUATE ENGINEERING CLASSES ALSO AVAILABLE AT soc

COMPUTER SERVICES AT SOC: .We have a Decwriter II computer terminal tied to the main . cam s. UCF students located in SOC' s service area are encouraged to use this equipment. . Future-April 8, 1983

For the First Time: SG Cabinet Position Interviews.

Call 275-2191 Pick up applications at SC Room 205 Mark Geary wants creative, dynamic peQple with le~d­ ershiP skills to apply now. Take the ~pportu~ity.

DISC GOLF TOURNAMENT DISC GOLF TOURNAMENT DISC GOLF TOURNAMENT

Sponsored by: UCF Ultimate Frisbee Team • Saturday &Sunday, April 16 & 1.7, 9a.m. Pizza Time Theatre, Inc. 1997 Aloma A venue Winter Park, FL 32792 Stars Hall .-..-.. · AMF VOIT DISC of Fame__ -.- t:··: Proceeds to Benefit: ,,., , . ~ Orange County . r Chi Chi's .fl) ~ - _- - : - Special Olympics_ WDIZ ae ....c -·- ·-" . ~ .- · .. 1-- 0 ,. Eighteen poles of flying discs teeing off at the Kiosk take you across the ~ greens of the UCF campus. The four thousand foot course takes you through grasslands, hills and water hazards. But the challenge is worth the free ..fl) refreshments and prizes at the nineteenth hole...... -a ca Come out and enjoy two days of disc golf, frisbee games and free refresh­ c e ments. Over 200 T-Shirts and baseball caps to be given away. A total of Q $1200 in door prizes and victory prizes. Admission fee is five dollars. u :E .Men and womens divisions. Spectators are welcome to come and enjoy In the fun and prizes~ For more information call Kurt at 275-4310 or Steve at · 282-4642. • ..fl) Early registration party on Wednesday April 13 at the Kiosk. Free suds c ·ca donated by CARRIE NATION'S on Wednesday. 1------.... Retum to UCF P .0. Box 26888. Enclose $ 5. : ~ = ~CIO~ I c Q 0 CIO c I u; z ::>~ii"' Q) Kelly's Grand Prix I .. "'w w ->o"' -4J> Circus · w C! Z E~-go CC Fashion Square I ~ g 0 2C).213 World Arcade Raceway I z < ~ ~a:o£ Page 13

From classroom to ba·r_room Artizan keeps it heavy by Larry Thompson Ehtertolnment editor said. "Our main influence is from British art-rock. 11 Propped against the front of Pet.e Weller said the band tries to play Weller's massive drum set are two music by name bands, but it's "the large rocks. If these symbols are not a FM side of groups that nobody's ever hint of the musical style of Artizan, heard.'~ - .. then Richey Vincente's piercing Still, the· band has plans to expand guitar and Dan Yeaple's pounding its sound and devot.e more time to · bass should get the message across. writing. "Our main goal is originals," Unlike a number of local bands Weller said. trying to break into the club circuit by Yeaple, a . UCF transfer student playing weeks at a time on the road, from Auburndale, said the band co­ the members· of Artizan are taking a writ.es all the ~ongs. They rehearse in Artizan (l to. r): Richey Vincente, Pete Weller and Dan Y eaple. .somewhat different approach. Weller's garage studio and "we just They only play on weekends. They throw it all together," he said. also play regularly in Tampa and Although the band ha~ been have to. They're all students._ Vincent.e, a student at Seminole Clearwat.er, trying to establish them­ t.ogether for only about six monthS, "We all really want to get our Community College, writes on selves. ''The gener8.I consensus is_you they are surprisingly tight onstage. education," Weller said. ."But if op­ acoustic guitar, a holdover from his have to be from out of town," Weller Artizan is a det.ermined band but portunity knocks, we'll take it.'' classical roots. "That's why I like art­ said. Weller, an art major at UCF, is rock bands," he said, "they're all they've got.a long way tO go. As Vin­ ·aware of the limitations ·but is con­ classically trained.'' ·Artizan will be appearing in Wint.er cente observed, ''Anybody can be fident the trio ·will succeed. "We're The band plans to spend the sum­ Park at the Park Avenue Pub, April popular, but not everybody can be keeping up with the technology," he mer traveling up the east coast. They 8-9. · famous." 'The envelope, please!' A critic's preview of th~ Oscars ·

by Wayne Starr film, so they shouldn't get any Verdict ")-good performance, lousy UCF ~acuity Trio Future staff credit for a good one, either. movie; Peter O'Toole ("My Favorite Which leaves us the Big Year")-lousy performance, worse Technically, the Academy Awards Four-best picture, best actor, best movie; Jack Lemmon_ jazzes up forum show isn't a mini-series. After all, actress, and best song. ("Missing").:_not so special. Down it's only on for one night. But in Best Song: The nominees include a to two. One a short, little bald guy terms of sheer monotony, it makes tune called "H9w Do You Keep the - who looks like Mahatma Ghandi and by Norma G0ethe 11 "The Winds of W~" seem like a Music Playing," a forgettable song one who wants to be "Tootsie, but Contributing writer 30-second Shasta commercial ~ The from "Best ·Friends;" "If We Were looks more like Indira. Hoffman won master of cermonies will of course be in Love," which might have been just three years ago for "Kramer vs. The forum recital Marc.h 31, in the one of America's all-time great film good, but since it was in "Yes, Kramer." Ben Kingsley is a Music Rehearsal Hall. was an indica­ stars (?), Johnny Carson. Giorgio" no one ever heard it; "Up Hollywood newcomer. Go with the tion that jazz is alive and well on Awards are given annually in 427 Where We Belong," a ni.ce duet by newcomer. campus_. In an electrifying - 45 catego:i:ies, ranging from "Best Jennifer Warnes and Joe Cocker; Best Picture: Forget both ''The Ver- ' minutes, the UCF Facwty Jazz Trio Foreign Language Film in Subtitles and ' the ~er, Survivor;s butt­ diet," and "Missing"-the former entertained the audience with high Directed by a Guy Who used to kicking "Eye of the Tiger," theme of too boring and the late~ too political voltage feats of technical panache. Date Sally Field's Sister," to "Best "Rocky III." - (remember "Reds" last year?). Moving from mellow, sensuous Short Documentary Featuring Best Actress: Debra Winger ("An "E.T:"-granted, everybody in this melodies to imaginative improVisa­ Maintenance Men." · · Officer and a Gentleman'')-her role world, - and probably most tions, John Whitney (piano); Lee Several dozen "special recogni­ hot big enough; Julie Andrews ~verybody from several other Eubanks (bass) and Robert Petta tion'' awards will also be presented ("Victor/Victoria") and Sissy worlds, saw this picture-at least (drums) defined jazz in rousing ren­ Monday night, including one from Spacek ("Missing")-no, both have twice. But the Academy is rather ditions of '~ I Should Care," "The Se­ the U.S. Government to Steven won before and these were merely stuffy about who gets its' Oscars. It cond Time Around" and "Witch­ Spielberg for being the first person good, not exceptional performances. prefers the so-called- "important" craft." ever ·to single-handedly account for Which leaves two great perfor­ films-which is why sci-fi half the Gross National Product. mances from Jessica Lange, as the blockbusters like "Stars Wars," demented Frances Fa:r,-mer, ·and "Close Encounters of the Third Whitney assaulted the piano with There are only six categories. that Meryl Streep, the Polish "Sophie." Kind" and "E.T." will never win. fists, forearms and glissandos in a anybody really cares about. Two of those are best supporting actor and The Academy likes Streep. Mayb~ Come to think of it, that's also why virtuoso performance. His body actress, a category for peop:e who nex year, Jess. "Tootsie" wo!l't win. histrionics helped form an emotional don't want the blame for a rotten Best_ Actor: Paul Newman (·"The Go get' em, Mahatma. rapport with the listeners, who nod­ ded and swayed in rhythm. Most of the arrangements incor­ porated fragments of other tunes, as The new in "The Second Time Around," which included a few bars of by Wayne Star_r syrup and mush, it's fine wine and "Dinah" and "Marie." Future staH souffles. · Jackson's show at the Bob Carr "Song," written ~y Calvin Custer, When Joe Jackson came to Auditorium March 30 disappointed resident conductor of the Syracuse America in 1979, he was thrown into no one; no matter which Joe Jackson Symphony Orchestra, fused a lyrical the same category as all those other 1 they came to see-.the tough kid of quality and a Latin beat, with in· British "punks." His quick-witted "Look Sharp," the hustler of "I'm terludes of "Honeysuckle Rose" pop songs may have placed him a the Man," the "swing'.' man of thrown in for good measure. step above the "real" punks, critics "Jumpin' Jive" or .the latest incar- · The classic, ''On Green Dolphin agreed, but he was still a step below . nation, a piano-bar_ craftsman of $treet," featured the rhythm sec­ fellow Englishman Elvis Costello. sweet mood music. tion, with Petta's energetic drum The critics reasoned, "If we ignore Along with his superbly talented solo reminiscent of the ·big band him, he'll just kill himself like all band, Jackson was all of these and style. good little punks.'' . · more, including frontman for the Luckily, critics aren't infallible. most clriving R & B band around, This performance was more than a Four years later, Joe Jackson is still who surprised . the crowd with a jazz recital, it was a celebration; as very much around, and he's about as Motown medley encore. exhilirating as the trio's encore, punkish as Barry Manilow. In fact, Throughout the show, the band ef- Duke Ellington' s memorable, J ackson ~ght become the new king · Pam Glmson/Future "Satin Doll." of mellow pop. But his music isn't Jackson, page 14 Joe Jackson - Page14 Future-April 8, 1983 The fan and rise Spring / of vacation bliss by Bob Jaxson Beach. telling how much corrosion the trus­ Adventure editor Two days of high-speed driving ty '73 Bluesmobile had suffered had left me on the fringe of delirium. from the salt spray. Steve and Connie were making' In such a state, I had forgotten that The only casualty of the trip was love when the tornado hit. I was the peaceful ocean haven I sought an aging box turtle. I ts racing days watching "Conan the Barbarian" on would be infested by thousands of ended when it tried to outnin me on TV in the den. escapees from the North. Spring a sharp curve. The impact of the rear break caught me by surprise. wheel was quick and crunchy. Arnold Schwarzenegger had just The helmeted officer, who looked Several good hours remained in chopped off James Earl Jones' head like a sturgeon and talked like Mar­ the afternoon sun as I pulled into when the lights went out. The churn­ tin Landau, was writing out the the pock-marked parking lot at Lake · The Beatles: ing funnel cloud passed at a safe ticket in the front seat. He began to Claire. The wind was blowing. distance, leaving the roof, the ask me questions. Pulling one last warm beet from A trlvia contest refrigerator and me intact. But I was not functional. Outside under the seat, I stopped the the car, writhing student bodies lay Bluesmobile and walked toward the Through the miracle of modern re­ Steve and Connie survived too. on the naked hot sand. I could only trees. . recording techniques, the classic Beatles' Amid the rumbling, they thought movie, "A Hard Days Night," has been re· respond by reading the T-shirts, Two bearded locals were exacting released In Dolby stereo. To celebrate the they had reached some utopian banners and advertisements I saw. great -skill keeping a tattered nylon return of this classic film, the Future and ecstasy, never realizing that a "What's your name?" kite aloft. The pine trees formed a 21st Century Theatre wont to give you two meteorological malestrom had nearly "Dr. Pepper," I answered, as a pointed barrier as the thin string free posses to the Aprll 15 showing. snuffed all our candles out. vendor walked by. stretched for miles into the sky, the Just correctly answer the 10 simple ques· tlons below and bring them to the Future "Your address?" kite dipping perilously close to the office on Libra Drive. All entries will be The house is surrounded by pine A surfer in a white and orange treetops. J4dged at noon, Aprll 14. If more than one trees in a small mountain communi­ sweatshirt shuffled by. "East Ten­ By the lake, _ swimmers were correct entry Is submltfed, a drawing will ty. -Fortunately, the 35-foot tree by nessee State," I mumbled. splashing. A 'small child stood in an be held to determine the winner. The win· the garage did not fall on my car. "Mr. Jaxson, are you aware that ant hill. A picknicker raµ out of ner of the two passes to 21st Century · Unfortunately, it fell on Steve's new Theatre- wlll be notified by phone. All con­ drinking alcohol is not allowed on lighter fluid. A frisbee thrower step­ testants should Include their name, UCF Audi. this beach?" His voice was beginn­ ped on a snake. class standing and phone number. I decided to leave. Steve was cry­ ing to sound like Boris Karloff. It felt good to be back home .. The Ready? ~gin. ing, the insurance adjuster was "Head for the mountains! Hobie serenity of nature soon replaced the laughing and Connie was passed out cat!" I was on a roll. "Go Hawaiian! trauma of spring break. No tor­ 1. On Morch 31, 1964, the Beatles became the first group In music history to hove five by a broken planter. Think snow!" nadoes, no sunburn, no more beer. songs In the Biiiboard Top Five. · This horrific flashback of events The officer ga.ve me the ticket and At least "Conan the Sarbarian"­ Name three of them. from two days earlier helped ease told me to leave town. I complied. was on again that night. But my shock as I sat in the back seat of The drive to east Orlando was dif­ ~omehow, the ending was not quite 2. What Is Ringo Starr's real name? a police car on a Maj or Florida ficult. The car was full of sand. No the same. 3. In 1969, John Lennon changed his mid­ dle name to Ono. What was It before that?

4. Who was-the first Beatles' drummer? (He was fired In 1962.) • 5. What was ·the first solo album released by o Beatie?

6. Who was the youngest Beatie?

7.What movie did'John Lennon film In 1966? 8. What was the first Beatles' song to ' feature the sitar? 9. What was the last album the Beatles recorded together? 10. Who was the Beatles' first manager?

·Jackson--from page 13 fortlessly switched back and forth from the -hard-driving ''," "Sunday Papers" and "One More Time" to the low-key beauty of "Another World," "Breaking Us ALWA'rS· in Two" and "Cancer." These were HAVE A THr=RSS' not mere carbon copies of the record­ NOn\tNG ed versions·; "" was GLA~ON slowed down, while "Steppin' Out" ~ND. fJ~TTER 1HAN ·was funked up. ( BerrER 'rtrr. HIRAM WAOOiF\\ Jackson showed. how vibrant his -··. lliL HAND\) 1Rl PlE. SEG \ otherwise ordiiiary voice really is. ON TH5- On his new composition, "Real Men," he sang, "If there's war bet­ RDC.KS. ween the sexes then there will be no people left,'' in Joe Cocker's gravelly ·---..-- .- -- style. '','' a ballad, and "TV Age," which Jackson called a song about "Aliens taking over the world through mass hypnosis using MTV," were all great, but the highlight was an a cappella version of his first hit "Is She Really ·Going Out with Him." The audience gave Jackson a standing ovation.

Some accuse Joe Jackson of being arrogant. When a small group per­ sistently screamed out SQng titles, he snapped, "We don't play re­ quests. This is my band. We play what I want." Such an attitude may be offensive HillAlVI WALKER TRIPLE SEC when delivered by an everday sleaze For a free recipe booklet, wriLe Hiram Walker Cordials, P.O. Box 2235. Farmington Hills. Mich. 48018 ~q> 1982. 'lnple Sec. 60 Proof Liqueur. Hiram Walker Inc .. Farmington Hills. Mich. band, but with music this good and talent this . impressive, tiny character flaws are easily overlooked. Future-April 8, 1983 Page15

Center. Admission is $2. April 15, at 8 p.m. in the Bob Coming Attractions ... Carr Performing Arts Centre. In Concert · Reserved seat tickets are $12.50 tist and Educator,'' a collection and $10.50 and are available at of recent works by Blackney and · eHeeere's Doc! "Tonight" show the usual outlets. his students. The exhibition con­ trumpeter Doc Severinsen will tinues through May 5 at the appear in concert at the Lake­ •Lucky 17: Rock Superbowl­ west campus, 1800 S. Kirkman Sumter Community College XVII will feature Journey, Road. gym, April 10, at 4 p.m. Tickets Aerosmith, Sammy Hagar and I - are $10 and are available at the Bryan Adams, appearing April Muslcal Notes college bookstore in Leesburg. 23 at 3 p.m. in the T·Bowl. Tickets-are $15.75 and are on The UCF String Quartet and the •Fluted: Jazz flutist Tim sale now at the usual Centroplex UCF Woodwind Quintet will Weisberg, with. special guest outlets. present the season finale of the Larry Coryell, will be i~ concert, UCF Friends of Music recitals at the Loch Haven Art Center, April 11, at 8 p.m. The combined. groups will perform the music of Schubert, Schmidt, Hayden and Milhaud. Joining the quintet for rSTUDENT GOV'T special works will be: Roy • Pickering, trombone; William Schwab, s94ophone; and Eric Imported Clnemc;i 1 I , OFFERS Lesko, guitar. There will be a $3 donatjon at the door to benefit ''A political epic, compassionate the UCF music scholarship fund. and as bitterly funny as a car­ LEGAL SERVICES toon," is how critic Vincent Can­ Student Government seeks to provide VCC Art by described Polish director. An· students at the University of Central drzej Wajda's film, '~Man of Florida with legal services in matt.ere affec· The West Campus Gallery at Marble." The film will be · ting .their welfare as students. Services - Valencia Community College presented April 8 and 9 at 8 Got Problems with: provided include landlord-t:enant, con· presents "Richard Blackney: Ar· p.m. in the Loch Haven Art ·Landlords sumer, and discrimination problems. Also Insurance noncriminal traffic cases, divorce, wills and Contracts · name change transactions. The~ire? · ~~~s~~.~ ~ G St t u S A ~ sultation and document drafting free of ~ ~ ..______. charge to students in need of ~ces. Call _ . ame ree • • • " 1 ~ ~ 275-2538 or stop by SC 210 for more infor- ~ S T k ·$ l OO · university Blvd ~ . ~ 0 ens G> ~ mation, or an appo_intment. ~ • Game ~ ~ ~Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii... _.._._.-.-...... - ...... -. I Games s::: I f I I Pole Positions 0o1on1a~or ~ · I ~ - - ~ ~ Q'Bert Popeye 3-D Subroc Joust ~ / ~ Tron · Robotron Super Pacman PacMan Plus ~ I Donkey Kong Donkey Kong Jr. Stargate Time Pilot I ~ Galaga Zaxxon Ms. Pacman Dig Dug . ~ ~ Moon Patrol Tutankham Centipede Kangaroo ~ I Phoenix Space Duel Scramble Uarkon I - ~ I I 3012 N. G~ldenrod Rd. ~ I sun.11am-1pm (Belmont Plaza)·15 A · ~ ~ M·Th llam-IOpm 677 4430 . . ~ ~ F·S llam-12mld - ~ ' ~...... ,,,,,,, ..... ,,~

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lncest---1nnpegea them realize the importance of sup­ porting incest victims after they were put in the role. "Today's society dumps on vic­ tims; consequently, they're afraid to speak out. Many people believe that sexual abuse is the woman's fault," she said. For example, some people think a woman's clothing con- . tributes to sexual harassment. "My challenge tonight is what are you going to do for and about abus­ ed children?" Brady said. ''Awareness is most important. I ultimately decided I didn't have to be a victim anymore," Brady said. "We've all got to work together" to eliminate sexual abuse. Recently the Katherine Brady Foundation, a non-profit organiza­ tion, was etablished to support in­ If you're a senior and have the promise of a $10, 000 career-oriented job, do you know cest victims nationwide. _ what's stopping you from getting the American Express' Card? You guessed it. · Nothing. Because American Express believes in your future. But more than that. We believe in you now. And we're proving it. A $10,000 job promise. That's it. No strings. No gimmicks. And this offer is even gocxl for 12 months after you graduate. But why do you need the American Express Card now? Need Money? First of all, it's a good way to begin to establish your credit history. And you We Got It! know that's important. - Of course, the Card is also good for travel, restaurants, and shopping for things like a new stereo or furniture. And because the Card is .recognized and welcomed The Future newspaper is worldwide, so are you. ' recruiting sales So call for a Special Student Application represen ta ti ves and or look for one at your college bookstore or on campus bulletin boards. production personnel. The American Express Card. Don't leave Existing accounts are school without it:- available, offering great . Call today for an application: commissions. Call Dot at x-2~85 or stop by the 800-528-8000.. Future Business office. Future-Ap~ 8, 1983 Page 17 sports week Defranco plays tough wth a style all his own by Jeff Frederick Krass realizes the talent that he has in Future sports DeFranco. "Mike's been playing very well lately," Krass said. "He has Take one look at UCF tennis player really become·a tough player." Mike DeFranco and you would never , Alabama head coach Steve Han­ guess that he-is a varsity athlete. num went as far as to .say that "he DeFranco is a short, wiry could play anywhere in the country in sophomore with an earring in one ear Division I." and a disPosition on the court to mat­ So why did he decide to play for a ch John McEnroe's. Yet DeFranco is DivisiOn II team with little money the No. 1 seed on the 10th ranked and less prestige? Division II team in the country, and "I've always wanted to play tennis is rated as the number one singles for UCF, and I also have relatives player in the South for Division II. He here so I just' decided to go to school Ann Ransom/Future ranks number three nationally in the here,'' DeFranco said. Mike DeFranco rocketed into the Division II national spotlight this division. An average day for DeFranco, a season when he was named the number one singles player in the South. . two weeks by defeating Delaware, DeFranco is 17-3 in singles matches physical education major, includes ferent from most college athletes, he this year and has been a major reason three or four hours of tennis practice. Tennessee-Martin, and East Ten- has a common goal: to be the best. ''I nessee State. The team's record now the Knights have won eight of their He's been playing since the age of six want to win the NCAA singles cham- last nine mat.ches and rocketed into or seven and has some unorthodox pionships for Division 1 and then stands at 14-10, but the team is · the Division II tennis spotlight. training techniques. maybe I could think about turning looking ahead to only one match, ·Rollins. "I know we can beat Rollins; Some of DeFranco's victories have "Music is the most important part, pro." it will take six collective efforts from come against the likes of Florida, I always practice to music. Led Zep­ With DeFranco's help the team con­ the entire team but I know that we Alabama, Vanderbilt, Wake Forest, pelin works the best,'' he said. tinued its winning ways over the last· and Air Force. UCF head coach Eddie Although he may be a littl~ dif- ~ win," he said. Knights look to break slump agdinst_ St. Leo

by Dan Russo Future sports the mound in tomorrow's game. inning. Van Cura gave up eight runs UCF starter Brent Laycock lasted On Wednesday, April 6, the on seven hits in the outing. He was six innings in the game giving up five The UCF baseball team, mired in a Knights defeated St. Leo, 6-2. In relieved by Dan Casey, but Casey runs on six hits and walking three. mid-season slump, hope to get back that game Butch Vinson tied the couldn't find the strike zone as he He was relieved by left-hander John on the winning track this weekend Knights' season home run record walked in Flagler's last two runs. He Flynn who came in in the seventh in­ against the Monarchs of St. Leo. with his 11th of the season. was relieved by right-hander Rick ning. In t.he decisive ninth, UCF us­ The Knights will take on St. Leo, Marcello, who finished the game. ed two relievers before the .inning 22-12 and 3-3 in conference play, to­ In action, April 4, the -Knights, ended. day at St. Leo and tomorrow at UCF despite four Flagler errors and 12 · Kenny Wright, Jay Bergman, Jr., Providing the offense for the at 3 p.m. · UCF hits, couldn't get the key hits Garry Gawrych, David Hodges, and Knights were Jay Wollenburg with John Flynn will take his 2-6 r~ord and were defeated 8-5. Tim Foskett, all had two hits apiece four hits, and Mark Deglomine with against the Monarchs in today's game In that game, UCF pitcher Dave for the Knights. Foskett also drove three. · at St. Leo and Mark Miller will be on Van Cura lasted only until the fifth in three of the Knights' five runs. Outfielder Wollenburg was named The loss to Flagler brought the as the Sunshine State Conference Knights' record to 19-20-1and2-5 in Player of the Week for his perfor- · Foskett's hot stick leads the conference. mance last week. Infielder Butch·· On, April 2, FIT erupted for six Vinson needs only one more home UCF's offensive firepower runs in the ninth inning.to defeat the run to break the UCF team record of Knights 14-6. 11, set by Sam Nattile last year. by Mike Candelaria · performance to one ·man, Bergman. Future sports "I feel more comfortable at the plate," he said. "He (Bergman) For the past three years at UCF, hasn't pressured me. He says just Tim Foskett has been a good g9 out and have fun. baseball player. Each season he has "The key to my success, in a word, .. hit over .300 and played his center­ is Bergman," Foskett said. field position well. However, this ·. Foskett said he now likes to go to year under the guidance of new head ~he ball park everyday, whereas, last coach Jay Bergman, Foskett has year that wasn't always the case. become outstanding. Since his arrival in 1979 from· Through his first 40 games ·this Orlando's Colonial High School, he . season, Foskett was hitting a torrid has seen the team mired in mediocri­ .469 with ten doubles, seven triples ty. But he sees a different attitude and 26 runs battled in. In contrast, on this year's club. "Everybody's a iast year he hit .302 with six doubles, big part of the organization," 2 triples and 14 RBI's. Foskett said. "We work together; Foskett attributes his improved we all want to win.''

Business manager position opens

UCF athletic department of­ he will solicit applications from ficials will begin advertising for a many Southeastern schools . new business manager next week through 'some personal mail re­ ... in order to fill the position resign­ quests. _ed by Bill Goldsby April 31. He said he hopes to have the According to Athletic Director position filled in six to eight Bill Peterson, the position will be weeks. Filling in the position now advertised in some state universi­ in an interim role is Barbara Rat­ ty publications for about a ti, who moved over from the inter­ nal auditing department. Ann Ransom/Future month. In addition, Peterson said Tim Foskett slides safely into second base in last Monday's game against Flagler College. Knights lost the game 8-5. T~ay they face St. Leo away. 44 Page 18 Future-April 8, 1983 I Crew team ready for Miami International by Leslie deZwart the F.A.C. Mayor's Cup Regatta on The women's lightweight four and that event. Future sparts March 26. men's eight took third.· In last week's action, UCF com­ Despite high winds, which The women's eight race proved to peted in the Jerome P. Keuper Cup Faced with starting line dif· hindered UCF's performance, the be an exciting one, with FIT winn­ against FIT. ficulties and a schedule 3Y2 hours team managed to outlast the other ing and Rollins coming in second, FIT dominated most of the events behind, UCF's men's and. women's · crews to win the women's four event beating UCF by. six-tenths of a se· with UCF winning only the men's 9rew teams · plac~ second overall in and take second m the men's four cond~ UCF came in third in that four event. However, UCF gave FIT event. strong competition in the JV ...- OR.EDKEN SALON PRESCR.lrTION ~RIDKEN SALON PR.ESCRJrroN @.REDKEN SA1..0N PRE ~ The men's lightweight four race women's eigP,t and the men's was exciting right from the start, freshmen/novice eight. j : .· ·· Azeem Hairstyling . · · ~ when Ohio State flipped its boat at . Tomorrow the crew travels to .. the starting line. No injuries were Miami to compete in the Miami In­ ~ ~ reported and UCF placed fourth in ternational Regatta. ~ The Scientific Approach to a Total Look a · ~ for Men a-lid Wo~e~ ... ,ncludes_H~ir analysis § ~ OPEN . § . W£ ARE HERE · :~ 9·5 Tues. ·Sat. '%· ~ 2 j Thurs. Eve. ' @ by Appt. Only . i ~

- ~ . ~ t No Gratuities Please ~

- Ann RonsomlFuture Women's crew members practicing their ·skills ~t · daybreak on Lake Pickett. · ~ ~Nmt-Ol NOll.JnDSnfJ N01VS NnfCllll@ NOl1.Jl10SJ~J NOlVS N])K]31f .~ ~ Football team wraps up .. spring work.

by Mike Candelaria Future sparts

The UCF football team concluded its first-ever spring practice with an intrasquad scrimmage last Satur­ day on campus. In the hour-long scrimmage, which marked the debut of head coach Lou Saban, the offense beat the defense, 14-6.

/ Sophomore quarterback Raymond Agee, who steadily improved last • year, continued to progress, running for one touchdown and passing for another. He was seven of 12 for 137 ·yards on the day. Junior Dana Thyhsen, the starting quarterback for · most of last year, hit 11 of 20 passes for 83 yards and one interception. Perhaps the surprise of the day was the play of sophomore running back Darryl Love. Love set up both scores, cat­ ching bombs of 54 and 43 yards. ·

The defense· scored first in the game .when an Agee pass bounced off the_ shoulder. pads ·of receiver Mike Collier and into the hands of defensive back Greg Atterberry, who returned it 51 yards for the score.

The offense came back on a one­ yard scoring dive by Agee. Agee then finished up the scoring by hit· ting senior tight end Harry deAn- . tonio with a six-yard touchdown pass. Overall, Saban was pleased. ''Spr· ing practice was just wh;;tt we ex· FOR THE· pected" he said. "We evaluated the talent. REAL TASTE OF BEER ''I was pleased with the work of the quarterbacks during the game. PABST.IS THE PLACE. But, I was disappointed with the depth. We'll need more depth next year,'' Saban said. Practice for the Sept. 3 opener • i9B3 Pabsl Brewing-Company. Milwaukee W1scons1n !lgainst Elizabeth City State will resume Aug. 10. Future-April 8, 1983 Page19

• M~n's tennis takes sec9nd in conference tourney· by Jeff Frederick finished with 21 to claim the con­ players in each of the remammg While the men were battling con­ Future SPorts ference champiQnship. The tourna­ singles matches, they came away ference foes, the women were play­ ment was held at St. Leo College. with no more wins despite numerous ing a pair of matches with out-of· The UCF men's tennis team nar· Competition started on a positive outstanding performances. state opponents. UCF was outmat· rowly lost the Sunshine State Con· note when Mike DeFranco won his Among the second-place finishers ched against Wisconsin; losing 9-0 ference Tournament April 1 to an ex­ first match in straight sets. Troy were Tony Snoeyenbos in the third to the Division I Badgers. They im· perienced Rollins squad. McQuagge followed DeFranco's ex· seed, Paul Marshall in the fourth, proved their record the next day by The Knights racked up 20 team ample by also winning in straight Mike Barret in the fifth, and Greg beating East Tennessee State 5·4. points while tl:~e highly ranked Tars sets. Although the Knights had Buoni in the sixth. The women are now 6-9.

Deadline: Student Rate:. Monday at Noon . 50 cents per line

Home cleaners needed. Flex. hrs. $3.50/m. Typing/word processing: professional for sale roommates to start. Coll 671-7463, leave name & num· resumes, term papers, theses, reports, ber wl answering svc. dissertations, etc. VERY REASONABLE RATES. WhV not buy instead of renfl 2·bdrm 2-b~n Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom, 2 Some editing. Close to campus. Last mobile home w/ screen room. 1 mi. n. of bath house 15 minutes from UCF. Coll Rod In ._..------~ minute projects accepted. Coll Cindy, 6-n- • UCF in adult com. w/ tennis, pool, mini-golf the evening at 282-0238. 5083. &clubhouse avail. $23,900. Ph. 365-7079. for rent Female roommate needed to share 2· 'Rates too high? Call mel Prof. typist. 16 'yrs Guitar, Ventura six string, good shape, great bdrm. 1-bath Haystack Apt. Rent, $155, experience at low rates. Call DAY o 1 for beginners, $65. Coll 647-5335, ask for securlty-$175, h elec/phone. Available 3 bdr. fully furnished house. Sleeps 6-10. 1 EV~NINGS, 678-4360. Steve. May 1. Non-smoker pref. Call Cathy, 275- ml. to whitewater Nantahala River, between 7698. Bryson City and Andrews, NC on U.S. 19. EKO 12 string guitar, $100. Sony STR6036 $200/wk. Cal 843-8658, 7-9 PM. receiver, $100. Lafayette Criterion speakers, Winter Pk., 2-bdrm, $200 & util. Coll 644-6610 wanted. $75. Col I 275-3241 . before 2:30 PM. 273-5610 Band to play for outdoor party. Coll 282· TOYOTA CORONA DELUXE, 19n, real nice, Roommate wanted to share three bedroom UNIVERSITY VILLAS 3919 or 282-8365. tinted windows, lmron paint job, 5 speed, ' home approx. 5 miles.from UCF . $100/mo. & Furnished & Unfurnished $240-$265 $3500. Coll Barbara 275-2417. lf3 utilities. Coll 282-5328. .2 Pools, Tennis Courts 1979 Kawasaki 400, runs really good, asking Room for rent In beautiful complex, own ., On-site bus svc. to UCF & Colopial Mall personal $700. Coll Dave, 273-9038. bath, kitchen prlv. Non-smoker. Female only. Close UCF. $50/wk. Coll 275-1709. To my bestest roomle ever: Happy Birthday, '70 Mustang-fastback 302, auto, PS, n~w brakes, new radials, alum. slot mags. Flame Combrldge Clrcle residents need room· typists Rachel! Congrats on beng legal. Love, D. red & black laquer paint. 1988 obo, 365- mates for the summer, possibly Into fall. Call· 7334. Jan for details, 273-0990. No leases. EXPERT TYPING: 24 yrs. exp. Full time. Term papers, theses, reports, resumes, etc. Never out of box, Vlvltar VI enlarger, head, Large 2-bdrm. apt. at Haystacks, $155 & 9; Correction of spelling, grammar, punc., services stand and base, dloptlc light source, light utll. Coll eves, 281-1269 or leave message and editing Included. Reasonable. Coll pipe stablllzer power supply, Omega 75mm 788-3317. Bea, 678-1386. Money for grad schoolll Our computers will color lens, paid $500, will sell cheap. 857· . find you graduate school. scholarships 1327. FAST PROFESSIONAL TYPING available natlowlde. Guaranteed. •Free .. Guaranteed 100% accuracy. Expert correc­ detalls, write to National Student Services, 1976 Triumph TR7, air cond, stereo, sun roof, tion of spelling, grammar, pu_nctuatlon. PO Box 14131. ~lnesvllle. FL 32604-2131. tinted windows, lug. rack, runs good, extra carpool Term papers, theses, dlss~rtatlons, research. sharp body, $2100. Call 671-0980. Wtr. Pk. papers, resumes, and typing. All work area. prepared on IBM display writers. Full-time Looking for someone In Polk Co. area to staff, all have college degrees. 24-hr. tur· Famous artist's residence, Lk. Harney, 1h share rides to UCF during summer sessions . naround avail. 671-3007. acre, 2br/2bth, $79,000, 671-2458, 349;5353. Coll Bob, 813-683-9618 or 813-646-9644 or write to 127 W. Hancock'. Lakeland 33803. Acc-urate TYPING, attractive/correct forms. Yamaha 400 bike 1980, 8300ml! , mag IBM Sel. II. Reasonable, minor editing. Exp. wheels, new rear tire, new battery, win- in any/all jobs. Call Marti-1 mi. from cam- dshield, 2 helmets, excellent engine, .__------=------'-4 pus. 365-6874 by 7 AM or after 5:30 PM. luggage rack. cardinal red, 60mpg, $950. Coll 275-1506. . . Typing service available, 11 years ex· lost & found·· perlence. Close to UCF. Call Denise, 275- AM/FM cassetta car stereo. Brand new In 6257. box. Never been used. Asking $55. Coll Ken 275-4145 or Brevard Hall Room 213. Lost: Near campus on Tuesday 3/29/83. He is Computer word processing, customized a black, gray and tan semi-long-haired cat resumes, theses, term papers, reports, etc. Bicycle-men's 27" Raleigh. Excellent con­ with a very long, fluffy "squirrel" ·tall. He Is From $1.50/pg. Call Jackie, 678-3173. dition, ·blue, quick-release wheels, $200. loved and missed very much. If you .have Coll 277-1838. any Information, please call 273-9444 or Professional legal/med. typist w/ Bus. 275-6602 PLEASE! degree will type anything fast. Editing IBM Beautiful Oriental silk carpet. 440 knots per ______equip. w/ choice of type print. Pica & Elite. . lndlvldual Confidential Counseling inch, 5 ft. by 3 ft. Reasonably priced. Con- Coll Patsy, 275-1709or 295-4188. · Gynecologlsfs tact 282-5684. ·sp~aker Service help wanted Impressive TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. Ac· '2233 LfE. RD. WINTER PAR~ . • Audi fox 1974, auto, all new exhaust system, curate. Dependable. Be a winner! Coll AM/FM/cass, good tires, very clean. $2500 o Goin experience as well as earn high JUDY'S Business Service, 671-0312. . 628-0405 make an offer. Call 339-8114. commissions. Join the staff at the FUTURE 800-432-5249 Newspaper. Applications being accepted ·Professional quality typing, term papers,. ton Free MGB 1966, 4 speed, electric overdrive, new at the business office (ext. 2865) for adv. reports, drafts. theses, dissertations, ORLANDO 1k WINTER PARK top, new batteries, excellent engine, all reps. 1manuscripts, resumes, letters. IBM elec­ C14AMBER OF COMMERCE new Interior, this car Is In great shape. $2600 tronic. Competitive rates. 24-hour tur­ or make an offer. Coll 339-8114. Summer Jobs--$350/week. 10 positions naround. Coll Virginia, 423-5588. remain for full-time summer work. All majors· Audi Fox 19n, sunroof, power brake~. fuel -3 sem. hrs. credit. Call 678-3062 for an ap­ TYPING-term paperS,reports, manuscripts, lnjectlon, AM/FM/cass., auto, new tires, new pointment. etc. High quality, affordable rates. Eves & battery, very clean, $3400 or make me an . weekends.. Coll 365-5989. offer. I need the mone I Coll 339-8114 . • Page20 Future-April 8, 1983

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