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Central Florida Future University Archives

5-23-1990

Central Florida Future, Vol. 22 No. 63, May 23, 1990

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Recommended Citation "Central Florida Future, Vol. 22 No. 63, May 23, 1990" (1990). Central Florida Future. 996. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/centralfloridafuture/996 " OPIN ION ...... 6 Golf team ·makes playoffs, .. COMICS ...'...... 7 baseball falls short CLASSIFIED ...... 8 FEATURES ...... 10 Knights drop two in Miami- Sports 'All The Films That Fit' - F~atures SPORTS ...... 1 2 .' ' ,, ·Future Volume 22, Number 63 University of Central Florida/Orlando Wednesday May 23, 1990 Campus improvements· race for funds

•• Workers ru sh to finish before incomplete projects lose funding

by Mary Watkins best things the university has CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE ever done because it will make driving safer on Libra Drive. , The bulldozer brigade is Hicks said driving on Libra busy on campus because many behind the Health Center was projects are underway as the dangerous because many driv­ 1989/90 fiscal year ends. ers cut through parking lots According to campus civil Dl and D2 behind the Health • engineer Mike Spinnato funds Center to get to CEBA Hicks are available until June 30, so said the new road will give the fo11owing projects must be direct access to the CEBA completed before the funds area. become unavailable to the Also, workers will pour a university: sidewalk at the far edge oflots •A connector road that runs Dl and D2 to prevent all fur­ behind the HVAC plant to ther attempts to cut through CEBA the lot. • A walkway connecting the In addition, workers are • student union site to the new clearing trees to form a walk­ fieldhouse. way to connect the student • Completion of the sidewalk ·union to the new fieldhouse. around Circle. He said the cleared area wi1l "These are the projects that first serve as a temporary are gung-ho to go now," Spin­ parking lot until permanent Jorge Alvarez/CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE nato said. lots are built. Then workers A bulldozer stands ready Monday morning to clear land for a parking lot near the fieldhouse. Spinnato said he designed will landscape and pave a the idea for the connector road walkway in the area for pedes­ way is constructed. "We need to stop wasting problem. in 1976 but the funds were not trians going to and from the "We have to get more fund­ space with flat surface park­ According to Spinnato, a available to build it until now. field house. ing for parking," Newman ing," Newman said. single flat parking space costs J .C. Hicks, assistant direc­ Newman said developers said. Newman is trying to con­ Spinnato agrees with New­ about $800 while one space in tor of campus services, feels hope to alleviate the parking vince the state legislature to man but says a lack of money the connector road is one of the problem before the new walk- fund parking garages. to fund parking garages is the see CONSTRUCTION page 4 Cookies, puzzles aren't enough for senators

by Tom Kopacz senate passed a bill setting the summer ferring questions about the accounts to condom with the April 19 report. STAFF REPORTER meeting time. pages 302-396 of Principles ofAccount­ For Sen. Paul Wheeler, the Daytona "Everyone I talked to thought it was ing and former student body Vice Beach campus representative, it was If the student senate had made 6 (p.m.)," he said. "I had to tell them it President Christine Toutikian ("She's the second wasted trip to the main quorum Sunday, its members could was 4 (p.m.)." an accounting major," he wrote at the campus this week. The Organizations, have enjoyed "$5-a-bag" cookies and an In previous years, the senate met at end of the Feb. 18 report); putting tic­ Appropriations and Finance Commit- accountant's word search. 6 p. rn. during the summer term. tac-toe boards and dot games on the The meeting, scheduled to start at 4 "(Missing quorum) typically hap­ report· and including a complimentary see STUDENT SENATE page 3 p.m. in the University Dining Room, pens the first meeting of every sum­ was cancelled when only 13 senators mer," Sen. Scott Bowen said. "It's al­ showed up, three short of the minimum most a tradition." number of senators needed to conduct Bowen said it will be harder to make -business. quorum this weekend because of the The senate currently has 30 mem­ Memorial Day holiday. bers. Comptroller Bob Shafer said he was Student body Vfoe President Jason disappointed that the senate missed DiBona announced the cancellation at his accountant's word search. · 4:32 p.m., two minutes past the half­ Shafer, student government's hour deadline for calling the meeting to unofficial prankster, had put the word order. search on the back of his weekly SG "Everyone probably thought it was accounts breakdown. It featured 12 at 6 p.m. because they weren't paying words, including bribery, cash, corrup­ attention at (the last spring meeting)," tion, embezzle, fraud, misappropriate said DiBona, who is president of the and money. senate. At the April 19 meeting, the Previous Shafer pranks include re- No applications for dean o undergraduate studies yet·

by Avis Quesinberry graduate teaching record," Astro said. In a five-page report, the committee suggested CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE· There have been no applicants to date for the changes within the program including the addition of position. an assistant dean position and the reorganization of A month-long internal search for the a replace­ The dean of undergraduate studies, Charles Mi­ the offices reporting to the dean. ment dean of undergraduate studies at UCF will end carelli, announced his resignation last fall. The res­ According to Micarelh, who was a member of the with the June 1 application deadline. ignation will become effective Aug. 1. committee, the suggestions are for "no major reor­ Criteria for the position includes a "minimum rank The office of undergraduate studies controls about ganization," but instead for some slight shifting ofthe of associate professor with tenure (and) a record of 12 programs, including curriculum, the registrar's programs within the office. · significant academic administrative experience," office, financial aid and ROTC, Micarelli said. A search committee of six members will review all Provost and Vice President ofAcademic Affairs Rich­ A five-member undergraduate studies review appli~ations and make their recommendation to ard Astra wrote in a recent memo. committee studied the program and its organization "Candidates must also have an exemplary under- last month. see DEAN SEARCH page 4 2 The Central Florida Future May 23, 1990

• FAMOUS EUROPEAN. VIDEO DISCO

• Th e Central Florida Future May 23, 1990 3 Police need help with Austin's case Witnesses of April 11 incident asked to come forward with background on Staeger, Austin

by Lisa Young According to Heller, "His attorney CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE will probably waive arraignment. If this happens, the judge will enter a The Orange County Sheriffs De­ plea of not guilty." partment is still looking for more wit­ Frank Merrick, the attorney who nesses in the case against Bryan Char­ represented Staeger at his bond hear­ les Staeger, a UCF student charged ing, had no comment. Merrick's secre­ with second-degree murder in connec­ tary said, "He doesn't make any com­ tion with the death of Wayne Steven ments on his cases." Austin. Staeger was released on Dr. Bill Brown, the dean of students, $20,000 bond April 13. explained nothing will happen to Detective John Linnert, the officer Staeger's status as a student unless a handling the case, said, "We are trying conviction is made. to locate more witnesses in order to find "UCF does not automatically sus­ more background about Staeger and pend [students convicted of a felony] Austin." unless there is imminent danger to "The state attorney's office has not other students. Each case is handled on filed formal charges yet," Linnert an individual basis," Bww 1 said. added. ''However, this should happen "The main factor is \ ·h ether the in a few weeks." event is related to the university in On April 11, Staeger confronted some way or gives implications that Austin near Hot Shots in the Alafaya something like it could happen on Commons parking lot. According to campus," Brown explained. witnesses, Staeger kicked Austin in In the 19 years Brown has worked at the head. UCF, he recalls taking such action four Austin, a hemophiliac, became co­ or five times. matose. He died April 15 at Florida "Even if a student is acquitted, we Hospital. will review his case to decide whether Michelle Heller, the assistant state UCF will take disciplinary action," attorney handling the case, said, "For­ Brown added. mal charges will be decided very soon. Probation, suspension or expulsion Staeger is now in Seattle with his par­ are some possible con sequences for a ents." student involved in a felony crime.

STUDENT SENATE the more expensive cookie , which he FROM PAGE 1 jokingly called '$5-a-bag cookies." Normally the food service provides its own cookies, as well as potato chips, tee, which Wheeler is on, did not meet sodas and ice. SG pays for the refresh­ Jorge Atvarez/CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE quorum at its May 14 meeting. ments. The absent senators also missed The senate did not lose any time on SUMMER CLEANING Pepperidge Farm cookies, which were crucial business. The only legislation Gary Wiesen of General Caulking pressure cleans dirt, rust and mud off Heatth provided by the campus food service. before it, incJudingthe 1990-91 budget, Center walls Monday as part of a four-week campus beautification project. DiBona said SG did not pay extra for is still in committee. Pentagon threatens to cut up to 100 ROTC's

Staff Report Lt. Col. Cal Blake, public affafrs officer for the Army of refusing to commission gays and lesbians as offi­ COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE Cadet Command (Va.). cers has grown increasingly strong in recent weeks. Blakesaidhewon'tknowhowmanyorwhatROTC The issue has sparked political activity at Even as anti-ROTC sentiment has erupted at a programs and students will be affected until mid­ DePauw, Northwestern, Northern Illinois, Harvard number of campuses, the Pentagon apparently is June. and Yale universities, the universities of Wisconsin considering eliminating 20 to 100 of its 400 ROTC "They want to make sure whatever reductions and Illinois, Cal State-Northridge, Massachusetts units nationwide. occur that we'11 have a manageable system six or Institute of Technology and Washington University The U.S. Department of Defense, which admini­ seven years from now," Blake said. in St. Louis. sters the Reserve Officer Training Corps, sa;. sit may Of the 51,845 students in the Army ROTC nation­ In late Apri1, MIT Provost John Deutch warned close .the units as part of impending cuts in federal wide, 8,000 will become commissioned officers this Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney that "many military spending, the Army Times reported. spring, Blake said. universities will withdraw from the ROTC program" "If the army gets smaller, the ROTC will too," said Campus sentiment against the ROTC for its policy if the anti-homosexual policy isn't changed.

• TIANANMEN SQUARE can call Lance Turner at 282- at 6:15 p.m., Ma.) 2.9 at the The exhibit, "In the Foot­ live-in adult supervisors. To promote awareness of 6078. Center for Women's Medicine steps of Columbus: Jews in The school's trustees are last year's reform movement in the Florida Medical Plaza America, 1654-1881," illus­ scheduled to vote sometime in China, the UCF chapter of • YES SEMINARS at 2501 N. Orange Ave., trates the accomplishments of this month whether to adopt Amnesty International will The UCF chapter of Pi Orlando. Jewish immigrants in Amer­ Sojka's plan or accept the h old a "Tiananmen Remem­ Sigma Epsilon, a national The program will address ica before 1881. faculty's verdict. brance" June 4. marketing and business fra­ the physical, emotional and For information, call 898- The activities will begin at 1 ternity, will assist the Young nutritional needs of women 8320. •HETEROSEXUAL DAYS p.m. on the Green with music Entrepreneur Seminars (YES) smokers. The program costs (CPS)-In reaction to Yale from local bands. from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. $95. • KEEP THE GREEKS University's ninth annual Bi­ At 2 p.m., students, educa­ Saturday in CEBA II. For more information and (CPS)-Bucknell University, sexual, Gay and Lesbian tors and a foreign correspon­ The seminars educate to register for the program, whose faculty voted earlier in Awareness Days, Delta Kappa dent will discuss China, the young adults ages 15-25 on call 897-1 785. the year to abolish all fraterni­ Epsilon President Phil Grande Beijing massacre, human entrepreneurship through a ties and sororities on the cam­ says his fraternity will sponsor rights and the movements and wide range of topics including • JEWISH HISTORY pus, should keep its Greek Heterosexual Awareness Days politics that have affected our starting out in business, fi­ The Orange County His­ houses open but diminish their on campus next fall. world in the past year. nance, marketing and fran­ torical Museum and the UCF role in the school's social life, "It's almost perceived as A march will start at 3 p.m., chising. Judaic Studies Program pres­ Bucknell President Gary being bad to be heterosexual," and at 7:30 p.m. a candlelight ent the American premiere of Sojka said May 1. DKE member Chris Munnelly vigil at the reflecting pond will • WOMEN SMOKERS the travelling exhibit from the Sojka recommended bar­ told the Yale Daily News. conclude the day's activities. Florida Hospital Commu­ Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv ring all freshmen from joining He added the event will Those interested in speak­ nity Health Services will offer at the museum in Orlando's chapters, requiring members feature progr.ams that "ad­ ing, assisting, providing art or a stop-smoking program de­ Loch Haven Park through to have a 2.5 GPA and making dress the needs of heterosexu­ sponsoring a class dis.cussion veloped for women beginning June 3. all residential units have a als" and "maybe a party." 4 The Central Florida Future May 23, 1990 .. CONSTRUCTION dent for Administration and Finance, don't know," Hicks said. and we can't hold it back," Spinnato FROM PAGE 1 feels UCF will be in good shape as far as In addition, construction on Pegasus said. parking goes. circle will allow for additional safer Bolte said UCFlias experienced over • Spinnato agrees but said we need to walking space. a 10 percent increase in students and a garage costs approximately $8,000. be patient. Workers are completing the side­ faculty each year. But with the increasingly rapid growth Newman said plans show 3,800 walk on Pegasus Circle. Also a major growth in research of the university, Spinnato said ga­ parking spaces by the new fieldhouse. Spinnato said UCF is a young cam­ grants will bring in even more people rages eventually will have to be built to Hicks said H.J. High Construction pus now but it will be one of the biggest to UCF. alleviate future parking problems on promised to complete the fieldhouse by campuses in the state university sys­ "If we were building twice as much campus. January 1991. tem ever one day. space it still wouldn't be enough room," As for the fall, John Bolte, vice presi- "Whether they'll make it or not I "Orlando is known internationally Bolte said.

DEAN SEARCH FROM PAGE 1 1 BLOCK FROM UCF Delicious Home Style Astro. Italian Cooking Astro said he plans to have a ALL AROUND new dean in office by Aug. 8 Pasta, when the new contracts be­ Chicken, come effective. GLASS Steak Micarelli, who's been plan­ & More ... ning his resignation for at 10065 UNIVERSITY BLVD. &DEAN RD. least three years, said he is SU NCR EST VILLAGE SHOPPING CEKrER FOR RESERVATIONS ORT AKE OUT planning to take a sabbatical TINTING CALL 671-5555 leave for the 1990-91 academic year. After that leave, he said he will return- to teach foreign Beat the Heat 1052 Condor Pl. language and literature for ~ x 5 Year Guarantee c: one year, full time. i5 LUNCH & Then Micarelli will begin a Protect Your Interior And as DINNER five-year phased retirement, Cool Off Your Car ~ ~ _,j~5 - teaching only part time. Then, cn S People like to come to Puccini's g> ·c: he will retire. $10.00 OFF .,_ Ci ; because it's a comfortable if "I started my career in the WITH THIS AD. ~ casual place.The decor isn't dassroom," Micarelli said. "I elaborate, the prices are reason­ want it to end there." AUTOS UCF able-"IT FEELS LIKE HOME"­ Micarelli is the first and HOMES 1052 Condor Pl. Enjoy a traditional Italian Dinner only dean of undergraduate COMMERCIAL Andrew Faust 366-3248 in a sociable atmosphere & do It studies at this university. He more cheaply than cooking at • has held the position of dean home. for 11 years. We have hundreds of great summer jobs ... • but they won't last forever. •Over 5,000 Sq. Ft. Fully Equipped Beautiful Marta! Art Center · Universal Weight Machines ..,,..,.,. == • • Olympic Set Free Weights

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Save time I The authors, Florida community ' ' college English, reading, and ~preparing Imath instructors for more than T for the CLAST! · 20 years each, contributed to the J I =Buy... development of the CLAST test and wrote the first generally­ IRIAB~ available CLAST prep book. ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM Getting You'll discover where you need help and you'll get the help you ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM need. This concise text includes Ready . instruction and sample tests created using the latest state for the CLAST specifications. It's only • $8.95. Ask for it at your CLAST~~~ bookstore today. Reading, Writing, Essay, Mathematics H &H Publlshf ng Company, Inc. The Florida CLAST Connection. Roadway Package Systein is • accepting applications for part­ STUDENT • tirne loaders and unloaders. LEGAL SERVICES Excellent pay - ·$7.00 per hour. Student Legal Services provides students with an assistance in se­ lected areas oflaw such as landlord/ WORK SHIFTS AVAILABLE: tenant, consumer, non-criminal traffic and uncontested dissolu­ Monday - Friday tions. You can receive attorney consultation and representation 3:00 A.M. - 7:00 A.M. free of charge to qualified stu­ dents. Call 275-2538 or stop by SC 210 for more information or an appointment . . Phone Problems With? Need? • Landlords? •A Will? • Insurance? •Name Change? 297-3715 ,\'. \l. Sll·1·

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It took Freud 38 years to understand it. ,,.,.

You have one night. v· :~ l~~Rl'/.{!Ni/ ® 'Fhe psych exam is in 12 hours. And your id wants to party. Your ego wants to conk out. But your superego knows you need to stay awake

tonight_to cram. . ,, ·' ... l'./,/. : "/,ywi~:f. Fortunately, you've got Vivarin. It helps keep you awake and mentally fol fasf'.Pid ujJ~:sate a:-;lffr" 1 .,~ 0 alert for hours. Safely and conveniently. So all your brainpower can focus / ,. ", .· ~@Jt.~_::: )~,,,· on understanding the brain. . ' ·, · _:: ..~f:· :. >1~f<:·~ ;*,%' HFreud had used \'iYarin, maybe he could have understood the brain · , · · ,· ::: ·· .}.l/ .. ~J.11

faster, too. Revive with VIVARIN: c l'NO ~mnhKhm· lkc..:ham l ·, •. "' <.lifl'<" ll'U Cl>nt"ln' c"ffdne rquinh:nl or IWU cup• uf coffee. t, 19'XJ Si!!ffiun<.I Freud cur!·nµlll rt-prn.,111.,d h~ Th<· R11)!<"r 11 ..· hm:in 1\J.!<'11.-1 lln-.·rl! Hilb. <..._ ~ • • . - / May23, 1990 6 \Jp1lll on 1 ~11111111111111i1111:Ei11~1l1~11i1111111:t1111r11r~1r11111i1•1:i1111111tr1:11111i- con s1ruct ion has become a dream [ turne·d nightmare •• The word construction has become a night­ mare to many UCF students attending summer classes. Our nightmare is crowded with bulldozers, construction crews and all of the daily occur­ rences that hinder our lives and test our pa­ tience. We realize that it is the summer semester and this is tradition.ally. a slow time for traffic, but many of us, with required summer classes, are still around. We are currently living the con- . struction nightmare. The entrance to our university is in the midst of what seems to be World War III. While we sit in our cars waiting for the Alafaya construction teams to decide what to do with the traffic, we can feel our patience deteriorating (We have been late for class on more than one occasion). We realize that UCF needs to grow and that the university officials are not directly respon­ sible for the mess that currently plagues Alafaya Trail. However, none of this rationalization comes to mind when one has to detour half way around Exploding animals become the rage cam pus because the main entrance from Uni­ versity Blvd. has become a scaled-down model of Here at the Exploding Animal Research Institute the Grand Canyon. we have received two very alarming news items that we are passing along today in the hopes that you, the The Alfaya mess may be beyond our control, generalized public, will finally break out of your but the campus construction is not. apathetic, selfish, materialistic lifestyles and send us The slashing of trees and constant construc­ some large cash contributions. tion on campus is a problem that the university Item One, submitted by numerous ·alert readers, I obtained from the alert father-son team of Dean and officials have sanctioned. They are the "dream concerns therecentcriminallyinsanevote by the U.S. Kurt Smith. The tape is from a local TV news show in Senate AGAINST having federal government moni­ Oregon, which sent a reporter out to cover a 45-foot, masters" of our nightmare. tor methane emissions from cows. I am not making eight-ton dead whale that washed up on the beach. They have given the okay to these construc­ this vote up. As you may be aware, cows emit huge The responsibility for getting rid of the carcass was tion workers who simply bulldoze first ... ask quantities of methane, which contributes to global placed upon the Oregon State Highway Division, ap­ questions later. warming, which has gotten so bad in some areas that parently on the theory that highways and whales are We don't want to see the expansion cease, but brand-new shirts are coming out of the factory with similar in the sense of being large objects. armpit stains already in them. So the U.S. Senate So anyway, the highway engineers hit upon a we do not want our environment to disappear. (motto: "White Male Millionaires Working for You") plan-remember, I am not making this up-of blow­ The administrators who are in charge must was considering an amendment to the Clean Air Act, ing up the whale with dynamite. The thinking here be blind, deaf and (well, we had better stop under which the government would monitor methane was that the whale would be blown into small pieces, there). Practically everyone on the planet is emissions from various sources, including "'animal which would be eaten by sea gu11s, and that would be concerned about environmental issues. (No, production." . that. A textbook whale removal. this doesn't necessarily mean they are alien low­ Well, as you can imagine, this did not sit well with So they moved the spectators back up the beach, life). the senators from those put a half-ton of dyn1imite states where cow flatu­ next to the whale, and set It is time to wake up from this nightmare. lence is a cherished way of it off. I am probably guilty We ask that you show some respect for the life. Leading the herd of of understatement when I land that you are destroying. While we have put opposition senators was say that what follows, on up with your constant construction so far, many Sen. Steve Symms of the videotape, is the most of us are concerned and we think enough is Idaho ("The Exploding wonderful event in the Potato State"), who took history of the universe. enough. the floor and stated that First you see the whale We are patient, but our patience is quickly the amendment would­ carcass disappear in a wearing thin. this is an actual quote­ huge blast of smoke and "'put the nose of the fed­ flame. then .you hear the· eral government in al­ happy spectators shout­ most every place it does ing "Yayy!" and "Wheee!" Central FloridaFltture not belong." Then, suddenly, the So the Senate took out P.O. Boll 25000, Orlando, Florida 32816 crowd's tone changes. You Busineu Office (407) 275-2601, News Office (407) 275-2865 the part about monitoring hear a new sound, the animal methane, which sound of many objects hit­ Editor in Chief means there will be no ad­ ~ing the ground with a Jamie Carte vance warning when, in­ noise that sounds like Managing Editor Lara E. Hutchison evitably, there is some "spud." You hear a News Editor Jennifer Offenburger kind of cow-interior block­ ...,,-:_1..,_.1.....,..,...im--'"'--,.._,,...;;;;.:;;..~:;;i;;;...~~"" .. .-~~-. R ...... "~~"" • .:-.!'..-- .. ,... -- ..-. , ""- woman's voice shouting a 0 Sports Editor Roy Fuoco age, causing potentially r1- /'Iv "Here comes pieces of. .. my Confetti Editor Steven M. Conner lethal buildup of flam- GOD!" Something smears Copy Editor Lauren Curtis mable gases and transforming one of these normally the camera lens. Photo Editor Jorge Alvarez docile creatures into a giant mooing time bomb which, Later, the reporter explains: ''The humor of the Production Manager Mark Breglio if detonated, could cause the dreaded Rain of Organs. entire situation suddenly gave way to a run for sur­ Have you ever, in a supermarket, accidentally en­ vival as huge chucks of whale blubber fell every­ countered a cow tongue-a large sluglike slab of gray Business Manager Thomas Negron where." One piece caved in the roofof car parked more flesh that you couldn't imagine anybody purchasing than a quarter of a mile away. Remaining on the • Office Manager Tracy Torres for any purpose other than to nail it to the front door Ad Production Manager Tanya Newberry beach were several rotting whale sectors the size of in hopes pf scaring off evil spirits? Well, I'd like to condominium units. There was no sign of the sea Advertising Staff Armand Cimaroli know what Sen. Symms would say if one of those Jeff Celebre gulls, who had no doubt permanently relocated to babies came hurtling out of the sky and struck him at Brazil. Opinions expressed In The Central Florida F11ture are those of the newspaper or Individual upwards of 100 miles per hour. "Yuck," would be my This is a very sobering videotape. Here at the columnist and not necessarily those of the Board of Publications, University Administration, guess. or Board of Regents. Leners to the Editor must be typed, maximum of 300 words and include Institute we watch it often, especially at parties. But the author's signature, major and phone nurrber. Letters are subjec1 to editing lor grammar I base this statement on a similar situation in this is no time for gaiety. This is a time to get hold of and space and become the oopyrighted property of the newspaper. Names may be with held Oregon where innocent civilians were struck by· fall­ but the newspaper reserves the right to refuse publication or any letter. The Central Florida the folks at the Oregon State High way Division and Future is a free,non·profit newspaper published twice weekly during the academic ye~r and ing whale parts. I am absolutely not making this ask them, when they get done cleaning up the weekly during the summer. Ali meetings of the BOP are open to the public. incident up; in fact, I have it all on videotape, which beaches, to give us an estimate on the U.S. Capitol.

.,'. The Central Florida Futu.·e M

I can't just sit back in class and go to sleep. Maybe it's due to the fact that I've been in school for most of the last 19 years that I've become so comfortable in the classroom setting, allowing me •1111t1ra111 to really listen to the information With that, I hope to have justified that's handed down and to interact my actions in the faces of many in­ with it, rather than just letting it play structors who have frowned upon straightforward into my notes. them. There are days when I'm sure the At this point, this discourse may instructors who have dealt with me for perpetrate a certain rebellious, bold, a session are quite fed up and would confident image for the columnist. I welcome an opportunity to throttle my admit, I like having the chance to tie­ neck a bit, or, at least, throw their up my past behaviors into a smart­ grade books my direction. · seeming bundle so as to make them I would ask these purveyors of travel better. knowledge to hasten a moment: Re­ However, I'll also admit to being member Socrates and the gadfly. The wrong many times, allowing over-zeal­ unquestioned life is not worth living, ousness in clowning to cloud the learn­ and, therefore, the patience of one ing environment, and, once, falling who's paid as a trainer must be suffi­ over backward in my chair in front of cient to get the job done. my entire class and two instructors Granted, the distractions of an from the college of my major. • arrogant student can breach good Lying on the floor in the midst of taste and the rules of fair play. Yet, that last incident, I realized that no I've seen people like myself well matter what a person gets involved in, handled by fleet-footed instructors no matter how worked-up one gets in wise enough to wear their senses of communication, education or fabrica­ humor as robes over their genuinely­ tion, it always helps to have one's brain concemed-with-students'-best-inter­ along. ests underclothes. Anger at times is Therein Hes, perhaps, an under­ inevitable, but a constantly foul de­ standing we can all agree to. meanor is indicative of a bad career I hope I speak for all college stu­ choice; and, frankly, students do care dents when I say to administrators Having ordered it nearly two months ago on a whim, to learn and grow, to challenge and be and other school faculty: rn show you the shark attack came as a complete suprise to Bill challenged. Closed-mindedness mine if you'll show me yours (brain, doesn't belong in academia. that is). when it eventually came in the mail.

DR. DeMINUS by Charles Rudd YEAH. rnrnrs NEVER MUCH LEfT THAT'S ME Too! IF I .srr A OP£N. I CLASS NUM8lR THAT'S STILL O'HJ, I WRITE ,\ ,,,'" {''•\ t ., IT IN. ~:.... ',\~\,'1.1~ '·I.. (

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.·.•.. The Central Florida Future May 23, 1990 9 ti

Catch Your Favorite Sports Team University Blvd. • Daily Beer + Lunch Specials UCF CAMPUS • Oysters + Buffalo Wings ~ . FOR DELIVERY >.- C'3·- • Big Italian Combo i_ ::'j C'3 .... -E- 11 am - 11 pm M • F • Famous Cheese Steak ~ Publix Plaza • Footlongs E. Hwy 50 I* All Pro I 658-SUBS •Burgers & Appetizers Colonial • Knightstalker (2 'foot sub!) • 11881 E. Colonial ' Colonial + Alafaya in the Publix Plaza • Darts & Games

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I Valid only *WI coupo1L Moo I I Validonly•111t_...,... Sex Valid only •nh coupon l'fol " 1hJ .)Illy • c '°"l'>lll. • "' ulld ••Ill Olila ""'polCIJ. . ¥alld Wl!21 ocher CD<:pL ••hd with Olli« -FO"· I I '.al1J .... ~ .)(!".itr'°"P'""" - I EXPIRES JUN'E 7, 1990 I E.lCPIR.Es JUNE 7, 1990 I EXP'IRES Jw.i E 7, 1990• I EXPIRES JUNE 7, 1990

You can I

to an Orlando Premiere

SHOWING Wednesday, May 23 8:00 p.m.

You could win a pair of tickets to a special advance showing of "Back To The Future Part Ill" courtesy of The Central Florida Future.

Just stop by the Future news office (located next to the health center on campus) today only for your free tickets.

Hurry. Tickets are limited and will be awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. ·

.. ' 'I I I I I

' t I "' " ' • " ol " ~ ' t I I I I I ti, I " I 0:. I I ••

...

Christopher Lloyd (Doc Emmet Brown) and Michael J. Fox (Marty McFly) star in the third and final installment of the highly successful 'Back To The Future' series.

Steven Conner (Christopher Lloyd) and Marty (Michael J. Fox) in distributing this Frank Marshall film. CENTRAL FLORIDA FURURE the wild, wild West, circa 1885. Mary Steenburgen joins the cast in this Steven Spielberg/Robert Ze­ • Jetsons: The Movie meckis project. The J etsons finally have their own full-length film. Last year saw the largest box office take In this sure-to-be hit of the summer, George and the in the history of motion pictures. Summer • Graffiti Bridge family move to a different planet when George gets a hits like Batman and Indiana Jones and the Prince attempts to make a major career comeback promotion. The fi Im got a lot of press last fall when it with this sort of sequel to the highly successful Purple Last Crusade were large contributors to box Rain. The film features the ultra-hot Ingrid Chavez For more movies see next page (_,.. • office receipts. in the role Kim Basinger History shows that the summer movie was supposed to play. The reunited Time (Mor­ season has always been the largest of the ris Day, Jimmy Jam, film year. This summer, the industry hopes Terry Lewis) also star. Prince WTote, directed, to duplicate its record setting trends with the stars and performs in the release of Dick Tracy, Gremlins II and Back new film. Look for a To The Future Part Ill. double-album sound­ track to hit stores in mid­ The Features section hopes our second summer. annual Guide To The Summer Movies will make this summer's movie selection a little •Ghost Dad TV favorite Bill Cosby easier to sift through. stars in his second at­ tempt at a movie career • Dick Tracy since The Cosby Show WarrenBeattyr;R.eds,Jshtar)andMadonna(Who's became a hit. The story • That Girl) star in the super-hyped film version of the finds Cosby as a ghost popular '50s comic strip. Word in the industry is that who finds out it is never this film is a spectacle to see from start to finish. too late to get in touch Beatty and Madonna both have film careers balanc­ with his kids. The film ing on this project. Oisney is the studio behind the marks the fourth collabo­ madness. ration between Cosby and Academy Award • Wild at Heart winner Sidney Poitier, Laura Dern (Blue Velvet) stars in this new film by who directs. David Lynch (Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks). The cast promises this one will be really bizarre (keeping in • Arachnopho'bia step with the' Lynch tradition). The popularity of Easily one of the most Lynch's work could make this one a big draw for those bizarre stories to come who like a lot of twists to traditional movie-going. out this summer, Arach­ Nicolas Cage co-stars. nophobia centers on the torment John Goodman • Back To The Future Part Ill and Jeff Daniels receive Universal City Studios Inc. _ ..,.~ The end of this enormously popular film saga is from a bird eating spider. Television's favorite father Bill Cosby is hoping for-a summer movie hit with this finally in sight. This third installment finds the Doc Hollywood Pictures is year's Universal release of 'Ghost Dad.'

(I ft f' ..... ' , 'f .. '. ff t f' ' ••It ·.·~ .. : ~ ·~·.·' ·.·.·:.· ·:.·.-:~ ·. .. 1 4 1 1 I " • • t • • t .....• • '• " • Th e Central Florida Future May 23, 1990 11

was announced that teen-tart Tiffany crime, but this time would be delivering the voice of Judy it's the designer J etson. Tiffany does just that as well as drug, Nuke. Robocop _ a couple of songs to boot. is called in to tackle New Detroit's • Another 48 Hrs. spreading drug The story is pretty much the same problem. Peter only this time it takes place in Las Weller reprises his Vegas. Eddie Murphy and Nick Nolte role as the ultra-vio­ • reprise their roles as the two detec­ lent halfhuman, half tives. Let's hope Mr. Murphy does bet­ machine, cop. Bat­ ter this time than he did with last man comic-book au­ • year's dismal Harlem Nights. thor Frank Miller takes his first tum at • Career Opportunities writing a screenplay Written and produced by John in this new script. Hughes (Uncle Buck, National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation), the • Gremlins 2: The film stars two relative unknowns, New Batch • Frank Whaley (Born on the Fourth of Director Joe July) and Jennifer Connelly (Some Dante takes us on Girls). The story centers on a 21-year­ another comic/hor­ old who finds himself locked in a de­ ror trip with those partment store on his first night as its "lovable" little grem­ custodian. His first shift is complicated lins. The new loca­ by a troubled girl and two inept thieves. tion is .Manhattan and the usual me1ee •Total Recall ensues. Gizmo will Arnold Schwarzenegger (The Ter­ surely start the minator) stars in this action/adventure stuffed animal craze film set in 2084. The story has Sch­ again for a whole warzenegger dreaming he used to live new generation of on the planet Mars. It turns out the little ones. Phoebe • guy's dreams slowly become his own Cates (Fast Times At Paramount Pictures Corporation nightmarish reality. Paul Verhoeven, Ridgemont High) Funny man Eddie Murphy re-teams with Nick Nolte for Paramount Picture's sequel to '48 Hrs.' the violent visionary behind Robocop, returns in the se­ directs. quel. third installment in the film chain. • Air America Whether or not this one gives audi­ Mel Gibson stars in the second ofhis • Problem Child • Young Guns II ences nightmares equal to the first film summer releases as a pilot for the CIA's John Ritter (Three's Company) stars Those rascally, young cowboys are remains to be seen. It has a hard prece­ secret airline during the Vietnam con­ • in this twisted comedy about an unsus­ back in this surprise sequel. The story dent to fo11ow. George C. Scott stars. flict. Co-star Robert Downey, Jr. pecting suburban couple who adopt a finds Billy the Kid and his gang getting caught a lot of flack from the press at child who wreaks havoc on their house­ prosecuted by the government. Are •Ghost the Cannes Film Festival over his de­ hold. Giving John Ritter's track record audiences ready for another Western Who knows why the "ghost" films cidely homosexual comments about " with movies, this one better work if he with these guys? Emilio Estevez and seem to be so popular this summer, but Mel Gibson. Downey referred to he and plans to stay afloat in the industry. Kiefer Sutherland reprise their roles in we guess people will see it because of Mel's homosexual romance while film­ Dennis Dugan dlrects. the film. Geoff Murphy directs. star Patrick Swayze (Roadhouse). ing the picture. Never fear females, Swayze is the ghost trying to reach girl­ Downey was only kidding. (Or was he?) •Die Hard 2 • Quick Change friend Demi Moore (The Seventh Sign) Bruce Willis finds himself up Quick Change marks Bm Murray's through wacko psychic Whoopi Gold­ • Flatliners against some tough guys once again. debut as director. In addition to co-di­ berg. The combination of actors is bi­ This horror film takes a twist on the This time the terrorists take over an recting, Murray co-produced and stars zarre enough that the film might work. typical horror movie. Here, the charac­ airport. Expectations for this one are in this fast-paced comedy about a bank ters are medical students who experi­ big and if the robber and his ef­ • Betsy's Wedding ment with the experience of death. Get trailer playing in forts to get to an This Touchstone film by director/ this, the stuaents kill eachother than theaters now is airport. Part of writer/star Alan Alda features the bring eachother back to life. Kiefer any indication, the film was shot trials and tribulations of a father's Sutherland (1969), Kevin Bacon (Foot­ Die Hard 2 will be on Disney sound­ traumatic experiences in planning a loose) and Julia Roberts (Pretty • just that. Renny stages at Disney wedding. Teen queens Molly Ringwald Woman) might be enough to draw the Harlin (The Ad­ Studios right and Ally Sheedy star alongside Made­ usual uninterested in the horror genre ventures of Ford here in Orlando. line Kahn and Alda. Ex-M*A*S*H-er crowd. Fairiane) directs. Alda needs to have a hit with this one. • Exorcist Ill: His respectability in the film industry • The Adventures of Ford • Darkman Legion seems to be going down hill fast. Fairlane This picture What would The "Dice" Man in his first motion could easily be­ the summer • My Blue Heaven picture? "Dice" plays a rock 'n' roll de­ come the surprise movie season be Heaven reteams those two Parent­ tective hot on the case of whatever rock hit of the without a strong hood guys, Steve Martin (Roxanne) and 'n' roll detectives cover. Adventures summer. Dark­ dose of horror? Rick Moranis (Honey, I Shrunk The isn't the only film Clay has coming out man boasts big­ Peter Bl atty, Kids). Both actors have been riding on this summer. Dice, a live, concert fi]m budget special ef- writer of the several back-to-back hit films so this featuring the guy in top form. Recently fects, stunts and a Orlon Pictures Corporation original The Ex­ film is sure to score. Th.e story finds the Clay has enjoyed a super amount of suspenseful plot. Peter Weller reprises his role as the orcist, returns as pafr donning bicycles and dare I say, press because of the Saturday Night The action-drama cop of the future in 'Robocop 2.' writer for the those nylon, skintight bicycle shorts. Live fiasco. stars Liam Nee- son (The Mission), Frances McDor­ mand (Mississippi Burning) and Larry Drake (LA. Law). Directed by Sam Raimi.

• Days of Thunder Industry insiders are saying this is a Flashdance on wheels more so than a Top Gun on wheels. Tom Cruise plays the guy who takes his dream of racing cars to the tracks and makes it. The film is by the same guys who brought us the movie Top Gun.

•Variations On The Mo' Better Blues Acclaimed filmmaker Spike Lee fol­ lows up last summer's controversial Do The Right Thing with this contempo­ • rary look at the life of a New York trumpet player/band lead.er forced to choose between his musi~ and his • women. Denzel Washington (Cry Free­ dom) stars. Spike Lee wrote, directed, stars and produced the film. · ~ • Robocop 2 Liam Neeson stars in 'Darkman,' the latestifilm by the man who brought us 'Evil Dead' and 'Evil Dead II: Dead by Dawn,' Detroit is once again plagued by Sam Rami. The film boasts state of the art special effects and stunts. . May 23, 199012 . S No bid Miami takes - . ,for UCF two from UCF

by Glenn Carrasquillo baseball CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE by Roy Fuoco CORAL GABLES - The UCF Knights baseball SPORTS EDITOR team lost their last two regular season games to sixth­ ranked Miami Friday and Saturday night at Mark With almost the whole squad Light Stadium. gathered around the televisions at . "When you travel to Miami to play two games a local sub shop, joyous expecta­ against this team, you have a chance to win one tions of a second consecutive play­ game," UCF Coach said, "We had our off berth faded into disappoint­ chance Friday night. We should have won that game." ment as the UCF baseball team The Knights came up short in that game as they failed to receive a bid. blew a 3-1 lead and lost, 4-3, in front of 2,585 Miami For the most part, the drama fans. The first UCF run came in the first inning on ended quickly as the first region Ernest Martinez's home run off of Miami's Shawn listed was the Atlantic region. Purdy. In the second, Chip Hummel singled and After failing to be among the six scored on Mike Josephina's double. The Knights teams headed to Miami, hopes added a run in the fifth inning. lingered on the outside possibility The Hurricanes showed why they are one of the of making the South regionals. best teams in the nation as they kept clawing at the "When I saw we didn't make Knights. In the bottom of the fifth inning, Jorge that [Atlantic], I knew we weren't Fabregas then hit a two run homer to tie the game. going to be in it," senior catcher Oscar Pa1meiro's sixth inning double drove in the Bobby Kiser said. winning run. The Knights finished with a UCF could not make a comeback of their own as record of 40-20, the same as a year they were shut down by Miami's . Seven ago, but apparently a few key Knights struck out in the last four innings. losses damaged UCFs chances. "That's been the story for us all season. We get the Players and coaches said losses to good pitching, but our hitting hasn't come through," Tulane probably did a lot to hurt Bergman said. UCF. In the second game, 4,636 fans turned out for The Knights traveled to New Miami's last game before they host the east regionals Orleans and dropped two game to Jorge Alvwez.C ~N T RAl FLORIDA Fu CUR E next weekend. The Hurricanes answered with a 9-0 Tulane by scores of 13-2 and 2-1. Steve McClellan (21 ), Brandon Turner (10), and catcher Bobby Kiser victory over the Knights. On the year, Tulane lost more than will leave big holes to fill as all have finished their eligibility. UCF sent Jon Henry to the mound with his 1.33 40 games. ERA, but that wasn't enough to stop the Miami "Those are games we should The Knights finished fourth in that UCF should have won at least attack. have won," Klser said. "Other than the nation in team ERA and had a one of the games. "We made some mistakes and a team like Miami that, I don't know what they're 22-game winning streak. They Next year, UCF will also have makes you pay for them," Henry said. looking at." beat tournament-bound South two chances to enter the playoffs The first wave of scoring came from the Hurricanes Pitching coach Mike Maack Florida, Stetson and Houston when they enter the American in the second inning. After a walk to CharlesJohnson, agreed. After an 8-10 start the Knights South Conference. Juan Flores blasted a home run to left. "Going back to the Tulane se­ went on a 22-game winning streak The advantages of being in a "I lost a little concentration on that pitch. With ries, you can't lose to teams like to move into the top 30in the polls. conference were illustrated by these guys you can't do that," Henry said. that," Maack said. "Coach But UCF slumped by going 2-5 Campbell College which finished The Hurricanes made UCF pay for another mis­ Bergman said that's going to come over the next seven games. Over with a 15-31 record but made the take in the fourth inning. With two outs, the Knights back and haunt us and it did. And the finals 20 games after the play-offs as the Big South champi­ committed an error that would have gotten them out losing to Miami 9-0. That's fresh streak, UCF went 10-10. ons. of the inning. Fabregas singled in Palmeiro who had on their mind." Bergman discounted the notion "That's a freak situation," reached on a base hit and chased Henry from the After Saturday's game, Coach that the mediocre finish contrib­ Maack said. "I think everybody game. Jay Bergman said he did not think uted to UCF making the playoffs. thought Coastal Carolina was The Knights couldn't get their offense going as the loss would hurt UCF's "Look at Georgia," Bergman going to win it. But that's baseball. they managed only two hits in the game, from Ernest chances. said. "They lost their last five rm not taking anything away Martinez and Steve McClellan. "If it was against an unranked games." from them, they deserve it." Miami starter Oscar Munoz, who is second in the team, maybe," Bergman said." We Georgia received its berth "It [being in a conference] gives nation in victories with a record of15-1, pitched a no­ won 22 games in a row and we have through an at-large bid. Florida you an extra chance," Bergman hitter for five innings before coming out of the game. the fourth best pitching staffin the eliminated Georgia in the SEC said. "If you don't win the confer­ "I felt real good out there. I had really good stuff," nation. We have the same record tournament. The Knights ence tournament, you're back in Munoz said. "I was surprised we shut down UCF so as we did last year and I think dropped a pair to the Bulldogs the same situation of needing an completely. They proved they are a good team by the we're better than last year." earlier in the year. Bergman felt at-large bid." way they played us yesterday." Golfers receive second Playoff berth by Jay Rutenkroger Tech, No. 14 Duke, and No. 20 Knights should better that CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE North Carolina State. mark. UCF Coach Dale Wilson The most improved golfer is Paced by the improvement said, "Any of the conference Joseph. He lowered his stroke of the top five players, the UCF teams are certainly capable of average from 76 strokes in men's golf team received a winning the regional title." 1989, to 74.2 in 1990- an post-season berth for the sec­ The Knights have enjoyed almost two stroke improve­ ond consecutive year. The great success this spring, win- . ment. Knights will compete in the ning six of 10 tournaments. The second most improved Eastern Regional May 24-26 Wilson said the team does not player is Kresge who sub­ in Savannah, Ga. consist of one or two stars, but tracted a stroke and a half The - field includes 23 five guys who can swing with from his game, 73.6 down to schools and the top 11 will anybody. 72.1. advance to the NCAA national "The most important thing Two golfers have lowered tournament. According to last to remember about this team their averages by one stroke. week's rankings, eight out of is that we have five guys who In 1989, Altenhof and Rice the top 20 teams in the nation play together very well aRd averaged 73.4 and 73.8 respec­ will compete in Savannah. The who are always pulling each tively while this year they Knights are ranked seventh. other up," Wilson said. "On averaged 72.4 and 72.9. Cow­ Those teams include power­ any occasion we have five guys gill finishes out the lineup houses from the Southeastern who can do it for us. All five Jorge AlvareztCENTRAL FLORIDA t-UTURE with a 74.2 average. and Atlantic Coast Confer­ guys are equally important. Rice, Wilson, Kresge (standing), Cowgill, Altenhoff, and Joseph "Any time one of our athletic ,ences. The ranked teams from One golfer is just as important (kneeling) won six tournaments. teams qualifies for an NCAA the SEC include No. 2 Florida, as the other four." play-off, it helps out much No. 9 Georgia, and No. 19 UCF's top five players are Cowgill is the lone newcomer vancing to the final round of more than just the athletic Mississippi State. Kevin Altenhof, Jonathan to the squad. the ·Eastern Regional. But program," Wilson said. "It The top ACC teams are No. Cowgill, Cliff Kresge, Malcolm Last season, the golf team with the improvement of the brings favorable recognition to 4 Clem son, No. 6 Georgia Joseph, and Andrew Rice. fell just four shots shy of ad- four returning players, the the whole university."