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4-22-1981

The UCF Report, Vol. 03 No. 34, April 22, 1981

University of Central Florida

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Recommended Citation University of Central Florida, "The UCF Report, Vol. 03 No. 34, April 22, 1981" (1981). The UCF Report. 84. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/ucfreport/84 U C F UBfiARl University of Central Florida Wednesday, April 22, 1981 Non-Profit Organization ARCHIVE Orlando, Florida 32816 Volume 3, Number 34 Bulk Rate Postage Paid Permit No. 3575 Orlando, Florida 32816 Address Correction Requested The UCF Report News and Announcements for the Faculty and Staff of the University of Central Florida

Knight Notes

It's National Secretaries Week and today is THE day to express everlasting thanks to those dedicated office engineers without whom the offices of the world would crumble into chaos. We love you all—and today, we'll get you a cup of coffee.

Word comes from Auxiliary Services that the deadline for spring quarter ID card The chancellor visits UCF validation has been extended to this Friday due to a delay Barbara Newell, chancellor of the State University System, visited UCF this week, speaking to a Faculty in obtaining a computer Assembly meeting Monday morning where she outlined some of her general thoughts and plans for the printout. future of the SUS. Throughout her talk, she stressed her interest in hearing from members of the University community who have questions, ideas, and suggestions on some of the major problems affecting UCF. She emphasized that representatives in Tallahassee must be made aware of the concerns of the faculty, Dick Korstad (Public staff, and administrators as well as those of the public in order for the needs of the higher educational Service Administration) systems and their surrounding communities to be met. Newell also told faculty members that they cannot wants all Bulldogs—UofGa expect an immediate turn-around in state support and that it may take some time before many of the goals variety—to jot April 29 on are attained. their calendars. That's the Her many meetings with University personnel and community leaders reinforced her desire to listen and evening the Georgia Alumni learn before making major decisions and policy statements. The chancellor left Orlando early this morning and Bulldog Club of Central for a return to Tallahassee and the current legislative sessions. Florida will get together for _J a spring reception at the Westmonte Civic Center in Altamonte Springs. Guest of BOR revises admissions rule honor at the 7 p.m. meeting will be Coach Vince Dooley. (Editor's Note: At a meeting in the Legislature an enrollment plan admission to any of the state Pensacola earlier this month, the • in which each university's future universities. An addition to the Board of Regents passed a revised enrollment would be specified for rule sets standards of admission You don't have to be . rule on admissions to the state German or Russian to enjoy universities which the BOR five years by level and by budget for freshmen entering institutions a program of readings of Program Committee had reviewed entity. The enrollment plans for which may be converted from selected 19th and 20th extensively and amended prior to each university shall take into upper-level to four-year institutions. Century German and Russian the meeting. On Monday, the State account projected funding," and • In response to a request by poems to be presented this Board of Education challenged the "funded enrollment levels for each the Governor's office for a specific revision because it addressed, in evening by Karl-Heinrich fiscal period will constitute the fee schedule which would produce part, standards for freshmen Barsch and Finley Taylor, enrollment plan for that fiscal the revenue upon which his budget entering institutions which may be period." recommendation was based, the both faculty members from converted from upper-level to four- A new section of the rule Board agreed to transmit to the the Department of Foreign year institutions. That conversion specifies that "the headcount of Governor the fee schedule Languages. Simultaneous proposal is currently before the translations will be offered Florida Legislature. The following lower-division student enrollment developed by a committee of for the presentations, summary of the revision is reprinted in any one term shall not exceed university administrators and scheduled for 8 p.m. in the from the BOR Memo. the higher of (1) the number concurred in by the Council of Fine Arts Rehearsal Hall. determined by doubling the Presidents. The presidents and the The revised rule sets maximum university's limit on first-time-in- Regents further agreed to headcount enrollments on first- college students or (2) the lower recommend to the Governor that It may feel like summer time-in-college (FTIC) students at division headcount of Fall Quarter final action on student fees be outside, but it's still spring each university and establishes 1980." deferred until more is known about and this Sunday we "spring" lower division caps. The rule also Revision of a separate rule (6C- changes in federally funded forward into Daylight establishes guidelinesfor admitting 6.02) regarding entering freshmen student financial aid programs. Savings Time. So Saturday students to programs registered as was also endorsed by the Regents. • Chancellor Barbara Newell, night, as you watch the last limited access programs, assuring The revision changes requirements following a report by Student of the late news and your A.A. degree graduates from for entering freshmen, adding that Financial Aid Commission Director clock reads 11:30 p.m., take community colleges will be treated students who have at least a "C" Ernest Smith regarding estimated a deep breath and reset it on a par with "native" students at average in all high school academic cuts in federal aid, recommended for 12:30 a.m. Hang in the four-year universities. courses, and who are at or above that the state provide a temporary there, sleeping beauties— Changes in the rule (6C-6.Q1) the 40th percentile of college- emergency loan fund for students you'll regain that hour in endorsed by the Board include 8(a) bound seniors on a nationally- whose federal financial aid is October! that "the Board of Regents shall normed college admissions exam delayed or uncertain due to the recommend each budget cycle to are academically eligible for BOR, page 3 Page 2 The UCF Report

.• Official memoranda the program once it has been established. To: All Departments • to assist with the management of the General Education Program From: G.C. Horton, director 6f Purchasing in the functions assigned to the Office of Undergraduate Studies. Subject: Surplus Property Surcharge • to assist with Undergraduate Curriculum materials. This is to advise that the 2 percent surcharge imposed July 1, 1980, • to accomplish any special assignments which may arise. on surplus property purchased from the State Division of Surplus Minimum credentials. Candidates must be in a tenure-earning Property has been removed; therefore, the only charges to be paid for position, hold a terminal degree, have a strong record in academic surplus property are the regular handling and service charges accomplishments and be committed to undergraduate education. The assessed by the Division of Surplus Property. ability to work with others is of paramount importance. Application and deadline. A current curriculum vitae and a letter ••••••• of application containing a statement giving the Search Committee To: All Faculty access to the applicant's personal files should be sent to the Search From: C.N. Micarelli, dean of Undergraduate Studies Committee. The deadline for application is May 15, 1981, and the Subject: Opening for Assistant Dean in the Office of starting date for the position is Aug. 15, 1981. Undergraduate Studies Materials should be sent to: A half time position as assistant dean in the Office of Undergraduate Chairman Studies is being established. The appointment is for one year but may ' Search Committee for Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Studies be renewed. An internal search will be conducted, and all faculty Office of Undergraduate Studies members in a tenure-earning rank are invited to apply. The assistant Room 210, Administration Building dean will report to the dean of Undergraduate Studies. The principal responsibilities of the position are as follows: • to facilitate the establishment of the Honors Program and to direct

Winter quarter minutes UCF-UFF consultation addresses Editor's Note: The following is a summary assigned three 3-hour courses, we relative to our enrollment rather reasonable efforts shall be made of the winter quarter consultation held could not expect to educate our than to the semester conversion to assure that the conversion to March 17 between members of the administration and the United Faculty of current students and to meet our per se. the semester system is not the Florida. obligations. He affirmed, however, Stern held that the academic reason for an increase in work that four different preparations departments could have used assignments. The parties should, where possible, be more adjuncts to maintain nine- recognize that adjustments in In Attendance: avoided. Juge added that the hour loads. He promised to share work assignments may be UCF: President Colbourn, Frank chairmen are attempting to avoid a soon with administration the necessary during the 1 981 -82 Juge, Carol Surles, Ashmun situation where faculty members results of an Arts & Sciences academic year for programatic or Brown, Robert Schaal have four different preparations. Advisory Council study designed to other reasons which are unrelated UFF: John Armstrong, Mark Stern, He pointed out that attempts have assess what faculty believe and to the conversion." He noted that Phyllis Hudson, Frank also been made to maximize want in course loads. Juge said this section also provides that "all Kujawa, Robert Bird, Richard scheduling by utilizing large the study will be well received by claims that the conversion process Crepeau, John DiPierro classrooms effectively and administration. is being improperly used shall be adjuncts have been used more raised in consultation at the Semester Workload Stern read from the proposed than he would like. He asked for new contract stipulating that university level pursuant to Mark Stern asked President suggestions from UFF as to how "although this conversion may Article 2.2 of the UFF Chapter. Colbourn to comment on a recent we might reduce the teaching necessitate a small increase or Upon the request of either or both article in The UCF Report indicating load, which is high due in large decrease in individual parties, representatives of the BOR that most faculty will teach four 3- part to a shortfall of funding assignments for some employees, and UFF may participate in hour courses during the next discussions which take place at quarter. He said the UFF views this the university level and assist in as an increase in teaching load carrying out the intent of both parties." Stern stressed that this and a potential burden on faculty NUMBER OF FACULTY*; AVERAGE LOAD. AND DISTRIBUTION in those instances when four OF SCHEDULED HOURS BY DEPARTMENT section is important because of the FALL 1979 different preparations will be serious impact of workload on promotion and tenure decisions. necessary. He contended that College/ Facu1ty Scheduled Credit Hours Scheduled Contact Hours Department Avf,. <9 9-11 12 13-15 >15 there has been virtually no Avg. <9 9-11 12 13-15 >15 Juge noted that the contract had discussion or leadership from Business not yet been ratified and therefore Accountancy 10.23 2 10.23 2 0 1 administration to assist the Economics 9.78 2 9.48 1 0 0 has no bearing at this time, and Finance 9.92 3 9.92 1 2 0 chairmen in planning effectively for Management 9.64 2 9.64 0 0 0 that it would be important to know Marketing 9.60 9.60 1 0 0 this increase in workload. Frank Education what was discussed at Juge noted that it is misleading to Elementary 9.65 9.40 5 12 2 1 0 Physical Edu. 11.29 12.14 0 2 3 11 negotiations and the intent of the assume that because 26 percent Secondary Edu. 9.60 4 4 2 0 0 parties in this area. President Teaching Analysis 10.15 2 7 4 0 0 of the faculty have a nine hour Engineering Colbourn reiterated that he does contact teaching load or less, that Civil Engr 10.11 Electrical EnRr 12.18 not favor 12 contact hours or four the remaining 74 percent teach 12 Engr Technology 10.21 1 11.59 I EMS 8.03 6 11.28 preparations as a norm nor does hours or more. In fact, 91 percent Mechanical Engr 8.81 7 11.19 he expect it to become the norm at of the faculty teach less than 12 Health Sciences 14.40 UCF, but experience elsewhere credit hours. (See table.) He added Humanities & FA has shown that this would not that such manipulations of data are Art 11.11 12.29 English 10.00 10.00 necessarily be an obstacle to misleading particularly to the public For. Lang. 14.00 14.00 accomplishing professional History 11.43 11.43 and should be avoided. Hum..Phil & Rel 12.00 12.00 activity. Music 11.95 14.47 President Colbourn indicated Theatre 12.50 12.50 Juge mentioned there are Natural Sciences that Les Ellis has held discussions Biology 4.61 15 0 0 0 0 6". 98 8 7 0 0 0 advantages and disadvantages Chemistry 5.11 9 0 0 0 0 8.22 5 3 10 0 with the deans and this has also Computer Science 8.30 4 5 10 0 8.30 4 5 10 0 with the semester system; for been a topic of discussion at Mathematics 11.12 5 5 10 0 0 11.22 5 5 10 0 0 example, actual time spent in class Physics 7.80 4 1 0 0 0 9.60 0 5 0 0 0 previous consultations. President Social Sciences under the semester system is Communications 10.64 5 0 8 1 11.07 4 0 8 2 0 Colbourn also noted that he had Psychology 9.57 8 1 2 2 9.57 8 1 2 2 0 three or four weeks less— Pol. Science 10.15 4. 0 5 0 10.13 4 1 4 0 0 made suggestions to the faculty on Pub Serv Adm 11.60 1 0 9 0 11.60 1 0 9 0 0 approximately 36 weeks instead of several occasions that creative Sociology 9.79 5 0 9.79 5 1 8 0 0 39 under the quarter system. approaches in course development President Colbourn said the should be considered to avoid four *Unit Faculty bottom line is how an institution preparations, but that course and ••Comparable data arc not available for this department. (Many courses are offered by meets its responsibility to its curriculum development is a atypical modes of instruction.) constituency—students. He departmental responsibility which Source: Academic Assignment Forms. cautioned that too much he would not intrude upon lightly. Institutional Research 6 Planning discussion about reducing .7/31/80 He further stated that with current teaching load at a time when resources, if all faculty were parents are concerned about Wednesday, April 22, 1981 Page 3

BOR (from page 1) federal cutbacks. • State Board of Education Deputy General Counsel Judy Brechner reported to the Regents that proposals by some state officials to charge foreign students James L. Koevenig (Biological and 27 on campus. Christian member of the board and Green is who have met the customary Sciences) recently won second Bauer (Industrial Engineering) a member of the liaison committee "residency" tests higher tuition place in watercolors at the 16rh represented UCF's engineering to the board. than native students seems to be Annual DeLand Art Festival, and curricula at the session, which Tim Worrell (Respiratory prohibited by the U.S. Constitution's also was awarded a second place was entitled "Computer Utilization Therapy) judged exhibits in the 14th amendment guaranteeing in acrylics at the Clearwater Fun 'n and Curricula in Engineering microbiology and zoology equal protection. Sun Art Show. Education." categories of the Brevard County Among other actions, the Nancy R. McGee (Instructional Regional Science Fair at Merritt Regents: Amar Mukhopadhyay Programs) served on the State Square Mall, Merritt Island, • Endorsed for consideration by (Computer Science) gave lectures Department of Education March 20. the State Board of Education rules April 6 in Gainesville on "VLSI Evaluation Team which evaluated establishing College Level Architecture" at the University of John Gersting (Computer the Teacher Education Program at Communications and Computational Florida's Spring 1981 Lectures on Science) held a consultation with the University of Miami,. Skills. Computer & Information the Medical Genetics Department March 25-27. • Approved a rule revision to Engineering, sponsored by their of Indiana University School of correct an omission in an earlier Laurie S. Linsley (Library) was Information Research Center and Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind., comprehensive re-write of recently elected secretary of the departments of Computer and April 4-7. Information Sciences, and personnel rules: that faculty American Association of Nancy R. McGee and Beverly Electrical Engineering. members considered for tenure University Women, Seminole Chin (both Instructional Programs) County Branch, for 1981 -83. shall hold the terminal degree in Wentworth Clarke and Fred directed a discussion session on the appropriate academic field. Fred O. Simons (Electrical Green (both Instructional "Putting Content into Content • Authorized UCF officials to sign Engineering) served as moderator Programs) attended a meeting of Area Writing" at the Secondary HUD documents to facilitate at a special session of the 13th the DOE Statewide Advisory Board Section Conference of the National monthly requisitions and receipt of Annual Southeastern Symposium on Global Education, held in Council of Teachers of English, HUD funds. in System Theory, held March 26 Tampa, April 2. Clarke is a held in Nashville, Tenn., April 3. teaching loads, sabbaticals enrollment could make a volatile Administration Building as soon as mixture. He said as a responsible Salary Increases six secretarial lines can be made member of the State University Fall 1980 available from vacancies occurring System, we must encourage in existing positions. It was further flexibility in teaching loads from reported that some colleges have Outstanding semester to semester to permit shown great interest in developing No. % of Faculty College % Faculty % time for research and professional such a Center. activity. College Outstanding Outstanding Increase Increase Information Items Several UFF members in Arts & Sciences 46 27 8.56 11.90 attendance expressed concerns of Business • Juge announced that tenure how increased workload might Administration 6 12 7.78 10.15 decisions are not yet final. adversely impact on promotion and Education 15 25 7.89 9.38 • Kujawa suggested that tenure decisions. President Engineering 14 29 8.33 8.98 anything said to the University Colbourn asked that it not be Health 5 42 7.60 8.50 Personnel Committee be assumed that he will automatically published. In response to this, be in agreement with the deans or Juge said that the articles by Ellis the various personnel committees on promotion and tenure reflect where promotion and tenure are what he has said personally to the activity. President Colbourn faculty for one-semester concerned. He stressed that every committee. responded that this activity is sabbaticals at full pay, and that the faculty member will present a • Juge commented on an article instrumental to the instructional administration believed that all different profile which will be which appeared in the Feb. 5 issue process; thus, if this activity three were sufficiently meritorious adjudged on its merits. of the Faculty Voice. He noted that results in outstanding teaching to warrant support. Thus, all three according to the Voice, "Business Frank Kujawa asked for performance it is assessed in this of them will be awarded. He has fewer 'outstanding' faculty clarification of general guidelines performance category. proceeded to say that those faculty and gets more money for merit for promotion and tenure; he Robert Bird, referring to a recent who were denied one semester at step raises than does any other requested that an article appear in article in The UCF Report by Ellis, full pay were recommended for college," and the article goes on to The UCF Report under the asked how many summer checks full-year sabbaticals at half pay, ask why. President's signature to this effect. faculty will receive, and if they will and that the five who applied for Juge pointed out that there is President Colbourn and Juge miss a pay period. Juge responded half pay were also successful in and should be a correlation assured him that the guidelines that although only seven weeks gaining awards. The total number between the number of faculty recently published with Ellis' will be spent in class, contracts of applicants was 13. signature reflect President with outstanding ratings and the will be issued for nine weeks; they John DiPierro questioned how Colbourn's thinking. The President salary increase. This relationship will be continuous between spring faculty can survive financially on said that faculty members must be is reflected in the table below and summer. He said this summer half pay. Juge said it is expected able to demonstrate total currency which shows that, except for A & S "full time" will be defined with a that faculty will find other in their fields. He said the first (which is extremely large and smaller number of credit hours. supplemental sources of funding. obligation of faculty has to be to which had the largest overall Faculty will not miss a pay period. President Colbourn said it is a teaching students. He added that percent increase), as the Bird asked Juge to look into the fairly common practice for experience shows there are few in percentage of faculty with College of Education's fractional sabbaticals to be limited to half any university who actually rate outstanding ratings increases, the computation of workload for pay. Juge explained further that outstanding, but he could see a money available for raises summer. Juge agreed to do so. when the University awards truly outstanding teacher be decreases; in other words, the Phyllis Hudson asked if there is sabbaticals at full pay it must be promoted to full professor and effect of spreading merit increases any possibility that additional staff prepared to absorb it totally could see a truly outstanding over a large number of faculty is could be funded for the Library financially, but when we award researcher and publisher be for each faculty to receive less. It during the next quarter. She stated them at half pay, we can replace promoted, but would hope that also shows that total salary that librarians will have to serve most faculty will be somewhere in an individual on sabbatical with increases rather than only merit more students with insufficient between—accomplishing in all adjuncts for up to .50 must be compared, because in staff. Juge promised to discuss the three areas of expected appointment. In answer to the some colleges such as Business, matter with Ellis. Also in response performance. He stressed, also, question of whether faculty can more of the salary increase money to Hudson's question, President that the reality of good teach elsewhere while on available is awarded through merit Colbourn said he hopes that UFF documentation of "outstanding" sabbaticals, President Colbourn and discretionary increases with leadership will do its part to performance is crucial. stressed that the intent of the less awarded through automatic sensitize our legislative sabbatical is for professional increases. The total compensation Kujawa asked President representation in Tallahassee to development, such as research. for faculty in colleges, however, Colbourn how he assesses the our funding dilemma. varies from 8.56 percent (A & S) to professional activity of researching Correspondence Center Sabbaticals 7.6 percent (Health) because of preparing instructional materials Juge and Robert Schaal reported discipline (Oklahoma Study) and resources. He asked if Juge reported that the sabbatical that the Correspondence Center related factors. research credit is accorded to such committee recommended three will be set up in the Page 4 The UCF Report

UCF Library Current Awareness Report

A special bi-weekly report from the UCF Library The Current Awareness Report, published by the Library since 1969, offers excerpts of newspaper articles dealing with important issues and developments in higher education. Complete articles are available from the Reference Department, UCF Library, P.O. Box 25000, Orlando, Florida 32816. school building level. Others, like Dean Paul N. Ylvisaker, maintain that the Education School's emphasis on macropolicy, educational theory and patterns of human development were necessary to provide substantive help to schools in the 1980's." COLLEGE OFFICIALS URGE ALTERNATIVES TO PRESIDENT'S CUTS IN STUDENT AID—(by Edward B. Fiske) New York Times, 3/30, p. 1. SEMESTER PRICE TAG SET TOO LOW-(by Neil Chethik) "Leaders of the nation's colleges and universities, conceding that Tallahassee Democrat, 4/9, p. 1. they can support some of the Reagan Administration's plans to trim "A year ago, the Florida Board of Regents voted to convert the aid to students, object to at least two major proposals and have begun state's public universities from a quarter system to semsters. The to push for alternatives that they say would preserve the core of estimated price tag at the time: $225,000. Today, after a year of current programs while reducing the drain on the Federal treasury. tallying the hidden and indirect costs, the regents will ask a Senate The educators say they are particularly concerned about the subcommittee to approve at least $8.5 million for the conversion. Of Government's plan to stop assuming the interest charges for students that total, at least $4.5 million would be direct costs of conversion, in the Guaranteed Student Loan program while they are in school. while another $4 millin to $5 million would go to correct an The educators say that change could add up to $2,250 to the cost of accounting problem that would be aggravated by the change. four years of college and could cause hundreds of thousands of 'Because we weren't expanding the school year,' said Roy poorer students to drop out. Also of major concern to educators is the McTarnaghan, vice chancellor for academic programs for the Administration's proposal to limit the amount of federally guaranteed university system, 'we thought it would be like taking the same loaf of loans each student can receive to the 'remaining need,' meaning the bread and slicing it differently.' It wasn't. And some legislators difference between the cost of college and the amount that the indicated this week that they'd prefer to let the universities eat their students and parents can raise. 'If this goes through,' William G. mistake. 'It (the conversion) was a decision made by the board, not Bowen, the president of Princeton, said of the proposal, 'a lot of the Legislature,' said Sen. Clark Maxwell, R-Melbourne, vice middle-income families will be driven out of the more expensive chairman of the subcommittee that will hear the regents' request.... public and private institutions.' College officials argue that, while Members of the Board of Regents, who rely on 121 Tallahassee- many families technically do not show 'remaining need' under the based staff members to provide information for policy decisions, said formulas used to calculate the expected family contribution, this can they were startled by the inflated cost estimates, which were be misleading, especially for families with more than one student in announced at last week's Regents meeting. 'I wouldn't have been college." surprised by a slight increase, but the magnitude of the increase CUNY LEADS IN REMEDIAL COURSES—(by Gene I. Maeroff) surprised me,' said Tampa regent Terrell Sessums, the long board New York Times, 3/31, p. 21. member to vote against the conversion last year. 'I just think that's a "When she was 18 years old and in the 10th grade, hopelessly lot of money for a technical change,' said Orlando regent Betty Anne floundering at Morris High School in the Bronx, Denise Riera dropped Staton. That money would go a long way toward meeting some pressing needs at the universities.'" out of school, convinced she was not learning anything. Within a year, she passed the test for a high school equivalency diploma, then FOUNDATION DECRIES LACK OF GENERALIZED enrolled at Lehman College of the City University of New York, where EDUCATION—New York Times, 4/7, p. 18. she was assigned to remedial classes in reading, writing and "A private foundation is urging the revival of general education in mathematics. Now, the 23-year-old Miss Riera, who needed financial American colleges, saying the pendulum has swung too far toward aid even to pay her subway fare, is a senior at Lehman, pursuing a specialized studies that feed 'self-preoccupation and social isolation. double major in psychology and political science. She expects to go to Students need exposure to courses that 'concentrate on those law school next year. Her record is one success story in one of the experiences that knit isolated individuals into a community,' the largest and most comprehensive remedial programs in higher Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching said in a 72- education, a venture that consumes $32 million of the City page report released today. The foundation said that today's college University's $285 million instructional budget and accounts for 17 students, who grew up in the 'fractured, atomized world' caused by percent of all classes attended by the institution's 165,000 students, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr:, by including the 9,100 at Lehman. As a result of an expansion that race riots, Vietnam and Watergate, 'are more committed to their began a decade ago to help absorb the tens of thousands of personal futures than to the future we face together.' General underprepared students who poured into the university's classrooms education 'is rooted in the belief that individualism, while essential, is when a more selective admissions policy was abandoned, remedial not sufficient,' Ernest L. Boyer, the foundation's president, and Arthur education has gradually become integral to the institution. It has Levine, a senior fellow of the Foundation, said in the report. This is altered the character of the university, giving it the role of high school not to say,' they added, 'that general education should promote as well as postsecondary institution, and making basic skills almost intellectual conformity or a sterile acquiescence to the notion of social as important to the mission as advanced learning." cohesion.' The report said: 'All students should come to understand COLLEGES FINK U.S. REGULATIONS 'STRANGLING—(by that they share with others the use of symbols, membership in groups Lawrence Feinberg) Washington Post, 3/30, p. 1. and institutions, the activities of production and consumption, a "Amid plain, utilitarian buildings and heavily traveled streets, the relationship with nature, a sense of time, and commonly held values Foggy Bottom campus of George Washington University has two and beliefs.'" unlikely monuments to federal regulation—two new elevators that HARVARD SCHOOL OF EDUCATION REBOUNDS AFTER cost $1.3 million. The elevators, equipped with wide doors and raised PAINFUL PERIOD—(by David E. Sanger) New York Times, 4/7, Braille panels, are set between two pairs of adjacent four-story p. 18. classroom buildings. For decades the buildings functioned with just "In the early 1970's, when many eduation schools went into a stairs or small elevators. Now, as federal rules require, the structures tailspin, few appeared more disoriented than Harvard's Graduate are fully accessible to students in wheelchairs. How many of the School of Education. An oversupply of teachers and administrators, 17,613 students at George Washington are confined to wheelchairs? and an undersupply of Federal support for master's and doctoral Seven that they know about, university officials say, plus 15 others students, created little demand for its graduates. In 1973, recognizing who walk with braces, crutches or canes. GW also has nine students that many of its own faculty had abandoned the training of classroom who are blind or partially blind. 'It's not just the numbers that matter, teachers and principals in favor of other pursuits, the school dropped said Linda Donnels, the university's director of services for disabled its master's of teaching program altogether. Since that time, Harvard students. 'It's a matter of principle and legal requirements.' The rules has been somewhat of an anomaly among the nation's education on handicapped students are only a small part of a long catalog of schools, dealing with the larger questions of public education policy federal regulations that have profoundly affected George Washington rather than the nitty-gritty of classroom instruction. That transition, and most other American universities over the past decade. described as 'traumatic' by several Harvard professors and According to one recent compilation, more than 90 federal laws and administrators, resulted in a loss of prestige for the school among the regulations have a major impact on colleges and universities. So do education community. In the past two years, however, the school has an increasing welter of state and local rules. As the regulations have rebounded, a revival that some educators attribute to its return to the proliferated, so has concern among professors and university more traditional mission of helping teachers and administrators at the administrators that the regulatory burden has inevitably reduced their Wednesday, April 22, 1981 Page 5

independence and impeded the most important role of colleges and who found it impossible or inconvenient to commute to college universities: offering quality education." campuses. STUDENTS FACE A PAINFUL TIME IN COPING WITH COLLEGE EMPHASIZING THE PRACTICAL, KELLER SCHOOLS ARE REJECTIONS—(by Arlene Fisher) New York Times. 4/9, p. 17. MAKING A BUSINESS OF TEACHING BUSINESS-(by Paul A. "Anxiety over college admissions is fed by pressure from all sides, Gigot) Wall Street Journal, 3/30, p. 25. according to Andrew Stifler, assistant headmaster at the McBurney "If Harvard is the West Point of business education,' Ronald Taylor School and former college counselor at the Dalton School, both New says, 'then we're the officers' candidate school.' Mr. Taylor is dean of York private schools. The kids are carrying heavy freight when they the Keller Graduate School of Management, Chicago, which may be have to cope with self-evaluation, parental expectations, competition the nation's only private, profit-making school offering a master's from peers, academic pressures and judgments from outsiders, all at degree in business administration. Keller prospers by accommodating the same time,' Mr. Stifler said. The anxiety will come to a head in the earger candidates who can't meet admissions requirements of more next week or so, as tens of thousands of college applicants receive traditional MBA programs or who want to learn practical skills from a telltale thin envelopes containing letters, but no bulky enrollment how-to curriculum that shuns theory. 'We're oriented toward the line forms. Admissions officers may soften their rejection letters with manager,' Mr. Taylor says. 'We know that not everyone wants to be sympathy, but there is no mistaking the harsh message—and the the future president of General Motors.'... Around the country, MBA disappointment—that the notices bring to many high school seniors. education has flourished. The American Assembly of Collegiate Already this year, many applicants have been rejected under early- Schools of Business (AACSB), an accrediting agency based in St. admissions programs, in which students are encouraged to apply Louis, counted 50,506 graduating students from more than 500 early in the school year in return for an early decision. Despite a programs in 1979, up from 32,820 from 389 programs in 1974. With pattern of dwindling enrollment at private colleges, an estimated 100 no full-time professors and only seven Ph.D.s among its faculty of 72 of the nation's 1,400 four-year private undergraduate institutions 'practitioners,' Keller remains unaccredited by the AACSB. It is attract at least twice as many applicants as they can accept. In some accredited, however, by a Midwestern agency, the North Central cases, the ratio is much higher. At Brown University, for example, Association of Colleges and Schools (NCAC), Chicago." 11,800 students applied for entrance to the class of 1985 and only CUTBACKS MAY KEEP THOUSANDS OUT OF COLLEGE, 2,475 will be accepted. At Duke University, 10,000 applied for the REGENTS TOLD—(by Larry Keen) Gainesville Sun, 4/3, p. 1. 2,850 places. Admissions officers concede that they must often reject "The Reagan administration's proposed cutback in financial aid, highly qualified students and they are candid about the preferential along with general economic woes, are likely to result in thousands of treatment given the children of alumni, outstanding athletes and students being unable to enroll in Florida's colleges and universities, applicants in racial, geographic, ethnic and other groups sought to a state board of education official warned the Board of Regents balance the student body." Thursday. Ernest Smith, director of student financial assistance for FLUNKING THE BAR EXAM FRUSTRATES THOUSANDS OF the board, said federal cutbacks would hurt most because the LAW-SCHOOL GRADS—(by Lawrence Rout) Wall Street Journal, economic condition is such that it hurts efforts by the state 4/1, p. 1. government, colleges and universities, lending banks and student "Hannah Best is a woman obsessed by a dream. She has spent her families to relieve the expected crunch. 'We've become accustomed days planning for it; at night she can hardly sleep because of it. She to this level of financial aid, so all I am doing is telling everyone that quit her job a year ago to devote all her time to it. Mrs. Best has failed somewhere down the line something is going to happen,' Smith said. the grueling 2V2-day New Mexico bar exam five times since her 1 977 'Education in Florida is a $700 million a year industry that depends on graduation from the University of New Mexico Law School. For four this aid for half of its funds,' Smith said. The problem is increasing years, she has been in limbo, legally forbidden to practice law but because of inflation. Many people won't have the ability to meet the unwilling to stop trying. Now, waiting in Albuquerque for the results costs, and someone is going to fall through the cracks.' Citing a new of her sixth attempt, she is resigned to failure.... For one out of every study, Smith said federal cutbacks could keep 750,000 students from four potential lawyers, failing the bar exam is a nightmare come enrolling in higher education nationwide next year. Basing his true—years of hard work at college and months of study in bar-review estimate on Florida's share of the nation's collegiate student body, courses, only to be stopped by the final challenge. Many of those who Smith said the federal cuts alone could keep almost 23,000 students fail keep trying and, although bruised, ultimately succeed. Others go from enrolling in the state." to court to redress what they see as injustices in the testing TUITION PLAN REASONABLE—(Editorial) Tallahassee Democrat, procedures. But in the end, almost 1 5% of the original test takers just 3/31, p. 4A. give up, often harboring frustrations for years.... 'Failing is a terrible "News of a possible tuition hike sweeps across a college campus thing,' says George Craig, a member of the Indiana state board of law like wildfire and it is not surprising when students quickly try to examiners. 'But it isn't nearly as terrible as putting an unqualified stomp it out. But Gov. Bob Graham's proposal to increase tuition by a lawyer out there and then having someone lose his life or fortune modest amount, and to determine what share of educational costs because of the lawyer's incompetence.'" students should assume, is reasonable and should be give a fair COPING WITH THE STRESSES OF MEDICAL SCHOOL. A SMILE review by both students and the Legislature. Although he is not HELPS—(by Lawrence K. Altman, M.D.) New York Times, 3/31, honor-bound to the figures, Graham has proposed that the state pay p. 22. roughly 70 percent of the cost of a university education, and that the "Everyone knows that medical school is difficult, but few realize student pay 30 percent. At one time, those percentages were close to that its stresses lead to about one in four medical students seeking a accurate, but today, taxpayers are responsible for 83 percent of psychiatric consultation before becoming physicians. Those stresses university costs (about $744 a year), and students for only 17 percent. have been somewhat arbitrarily classified according to each of the The state's costs have been rising since 1976, while the student's four years of medical school. Whereas most college students are cost has risen not at all. The crease Graham is suggesting in his given specific guidelines regarding what they are supposed to master, biennial budget would amount to about $100 per student for each of first-year medical students often become anxious and depressed the next two years. Although, to a student, every $100 is significant, because they are confronted by a mass of information that no one can $100 over the course of a year is not likely to mean the difference learn in its entirety. Many second-year medical students develop between going to college and not going to college." hypochondriacal fears and preoccupation with death from their initial NEWELL SUGGESTS STATE GIVE LOANS TO COLLEGE encounters with the various diseases. In the third year, crises related STUDENTS—(by Ardith Hilliard) St. Petersburg Times, 4/4, p. 2B. to issues of intimacy and closeness can be provoked by contact with "The state ought to give one-time, short-term loans to college patients. And the increased responsibility of the last year, as well as students who won't know if they will get federal grants until after anticipation of further responsibility as graduate physicians, can lead classes have started this fall, University Chancellor Barbara Newell to even more mental stress. Those problems are among the reasons said Friday. Newell said she would propose legislation for passage that educators have changed the medical school curriculum in recent this spring to set up the emergency loan program so that these years to introduce young doctors to patients at an earlier point in their students may enroll on time for the fall semester. But she didn't make medical education." it clear where the money for the loans would come from. All federal CORPORATE COLLEGE: HIGHER EDUCATION FOR THE student aid is in question because Congress has not yet acted on the WORKERS—(by Patti Breckenridge) Tampa Tribune, 4/9, p. 1 B. Reagan administration's proposed massive cutbacks in these areas. "Furnished with high-back, padded chairs that focus on a desk at On Thursday, state Chief Financial Aid Officer Ernest Smith warned the lowest point in the tiered room, one of the inner sanctums of members of the Board of Regents that thousands of students may not Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.'s southeastern headquarters in know by registration time this fall whether they have qualified for Tampa looks more like a military briefing room than a classroom. But federal aid. And the sources of aid most likely to be cut are the Basic it is just that—the home of Metropolitan's Corporate College. In the Equal Opportunity Grant (BEOG) and the Guaranteed Student Loan first program of its kind in the South, according to University of South programs. The BEOG program alone helps some 120,000 of the Florida officials, Corporate College is an experiment in bringing state's 860,000 private and public college students, he said. Smith college courses to workers who are unable to get to a traditional told the regents that he and other financial aid officers from campus setting. It is part of the To Educate The People' consortium university and college campuses predict a 20 percent drop in the based at Wayne State University in Detroit. About 10 northern grant program and a 25 percent reduction in the federally backed universities already use the program, USF officials said. By this fall, guaranteed loans to students. But Florida won't know for sure until as many as 30 U.S. universities may be part of the consortium, set up the end of May, much too late to expect all applications for s'tudent six years ago to provide a college education to Detroit autoworkers aid to be processed in time for registration." Page 6 The UCF Report

School to offer Grant opportunities For further information, contact Rusty Okoniewski, ADM 243, summer day camp x2671

The UCF Creative School for Children will once again sponsor a Agency Due Date Title summer day camp for children in Grades 1-6, beginning June 22. As outlined by school director, HHS 04/30 Identification of Current Level of Dolores Burghard, the camp will Resources Used in Geriatric Dental Education run for nine weeks, 8 a.m. to 5 SHIT PRODUCTIONS p.m., Monday through Friday. 05/01 Characteristics of Dental Hygiene Practice Children can be enrolled for the in Non-Traditional Settings - Development entire program or a choice of any of survey on work characteristics of dental two-week session. Parents also hygienists in non-private dental practice Club members have the option of enrolling 05/04 Refinement of Geographic Distribution children for less than the full day Forecasting Models - To improve the basis gain 'passport' as the daily program is broken into for estimates of future shortage area needs three time blocks: 8-11 a.m., 11 a.m. (determine trends in physician location and to mouse house to 3 p.m.; and 3-6 p.m. related factors) Tuition costs are $35 per week 05/29 Prescription of Communicative Devices A "mousegram" from Mickey for a full-time camper (with faculty for Non-Speaking Patients this week announced great news or staff parent) or $31 per week ED 06/01 Utilization of Technology in the for all Magic Kingdom Club (with student parent). Families Development of Basic Skills Instruction: members. enrolling more than one child will Written Communications With a valid membership card, receive a 30 percent discount for FL/lnst. 06/12 R/V BELLOWS Ship Time FY 81-82- members and their families can the second child. Oceanography Teaching or research activities aboard ship purchase a special "one-day Enrollment is limited to 20 (proposals considered in order of arrival) passport" which offers unlimited children. Registration forms can be NIE 06/1 5 Cooperative Agreement Proposal - To use of all Magic Kingdom obtained by calling the school at establish sites to demonstrate approaches attractions. x2726. Completed forms, along to improve practice in schools: 1) inter- If your present card has expired with a $10 non-refundable organizational collaboration; 2) participatory or you do not have a card, check in registration fee per child, are due planning; and 3) use of tested research and with Personnel Services—they can by June 1. experience fix you up. Want to make a hit? Take her out to the ball game Editor's Note: This week is Pittsburgh, she worked for baseball, Kennedy moved to Valencia has its Open Campus National Secretaries Week and to baseball great, Ralph Kiner, Florida. But for this baseball now," Milly said. all of you super office helping answer the volumes of fan veteran, "retirement" was a At that time, she recalls, there superintendents, we offer our mail he received as the Pirates misnomer as he found soon were only five University undying gratitude. In recognition leading home run hitter and himself scouting for both the employees including herself, and of the week, we talked to UCF's handsome bachelor—the George Yankees and the Mets. the University was still using top secretary. Mi/ly Kennedy, Brett of that day! After her family moved south, stationery which said "the new President Co/bourn's executive secretary, and found out she's not Kennedy left Pittsburgh after Milly came to work for UCF. Last university in East Central Florida." only a superior secretary—she's three years and took a similar month, in fact, she observed her Among her fondest baseball also a baseball fanatic! position as farm director for the 15th anniversary with the memories is "The year of the New . Milly's interest in University, making her the Career York Mets," in 1969. While in New her father's work with the Pirates Service employee with the longest York that year, Milly was invited by By Terri Naylor transferred to the Tigers and term of service. Mets president George Weiss and Student Writer before long, she knew as much "When I came to work for the former manager Casey Stengel to For most baseball fans, rubbing about the Tigers rookies as she did University, everything was located attend a Mets' game. The players elbows with baseball greats like about the Pittsburgh club. over Liggett's drugstore in gave her a souvenir baseball with Casey Stengel or being caught up Upon his retirement from downtown Orlando, where their autographs on it. in all the action from spring When she received the ball, training to a World Series would Milly remembers, "I jokingly said, be a dream come true. But for 'I'm really going to treasure this. Milly Kennedy, President Just wait and see, the Mets will Colbourn's secretary, that dream win the pennant this year.' How was a reality for many years—she was I to know that not only would grew up in a "baseball family." they win the pennant, but would Milly's father, Ray Kennedy, was go on to win the World Series for manager and for the minor the first time ever!" league Charlotte Hornets. "On the Milly continues to keep her eye day I was born," she said, "my on baseball today, following the father hit two home runs!" From Atlanta Braves via cablevision. then on, Milly's life and baseball "They're the closest major league were closely intertwined. When team to Florida," she explained. she was six years old, "Papa Ray" And then of course, there's UCF's moved to the as very own baseball Knights who, she business manager for the proudly adds, "won twelve straight Yankees' in games this year which tied a Binghamton, N.Y. Then he school record." transferred to the Yankees' farm Peanuts, crackerjacks and the team in Newark, N.J., as assistant cheering fans are the side of a farm director. After 13 years with baseball game we all know. But the Yankee system, Kennedy was UCF's Milly Kennedy has seen the named farm director for the other side—the view from the where he dugout and the front office. remained for three seasons. Smiling whenever baseball is During spring training, while mentioned, Milly recalls that "it Kennedy was with the Pirates, was fascinating... I loved every Milly worked as her father's minute of it. Well, almost. There secretary. Spending most of her was that time in Detroit when we time at the ball park, she saw had the World Series tickets more than 500 Pirate rookies already printed and lost to working to develop their sport's Milly Kennedy admires the autographed baseball presented to her by Cleveland on the last day of the skill. During the summers in members of the 1969 pennant-winning . season..." Wednesday, April 22, 1981 Page 7 r Staff Council ballots due back by Friday Every Career Service employee should have received a ballot via campus mail this week to be used for voting in the current Staff Council elections. As outlined in the council by-laws, employees may vote only for representatives from their respective University divisions—two each from Business Affairs, Student Affairs, and Academic Affairs, and one from the President's Office/Community Relations area. Ballots must be returned by noon Friday to: Staff Council Election Committee c/o Vice President for Business Affairs ADM - President's Suite Pictured at right above are the candidates representing Business Affairs. They are, from left, George McCumber Sr. (Physical Plant), Dorris Cannon (Personnel), Marty Fioramanti (Physical Plant), and Patricia Bryant (Physical Plant). Below right are three of the four representatives from the area of Academic Affairs: Ruth Armstrong (Library), Fran White (Academic Affairs), and Art Lehman n (Education). Not pictured is Carol Rumph (Instructional Programs). Candidates from the area of Student Affairs are pictured on the stairs, below. From top are Gracia Miller (Placement), Linda S/ade McC/oe (Recreational Services), and Lois Hilliman (Student Affairs). Photographed with them, at left, is Barbara Pope, the only nominee from the President's Office/Community Relations area.

Calendar WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22 Technology. Home court, 2 p.m. Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Admission: Calling all $1.25. Secretaries Day. Movie. "The Hunter." SC Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Admission: rec milers $1.25. MONDAY, APRIL 27 The Recreational Services Rec Staff Council Ballots Due. Send Baseball. Northeast Illinois. Home Milers Club is alive and well and to Election Committee, c/o Vice field, 3:15 p.m. looking for more members. Sign President for Business Affairs, up at the Office of Recreational Administration Building, by noon. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29 Services, run 100 miles, bike 400 Speaker. Jack D. Gaskill from the Creations '81. Festival continues Baseball. Rollins College. Home miles, or swim 40 miles, and Optical Sciences Center, University until 3 p.m. field, 3:15 p.m. membership with identifying of Arizona, will lecture on T-shirt is yours. A certificate is Men's Tennis. Rollins College. "Propagation of Lasers and Cinema Classic. "Village of the awarded at the half-way mark to Home court, 2 p.m. Gaussian Beams." Engineering Damned." Engineering Auditorium, encourage you along the way. Cinema Classic. "Phantom of the Building, Room 336, 4 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Admission: $1.25. Opera." SC Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Fitness Trail Concert. Sabina Micarelli and Admission: $1.25. THURSDAY, APRIL 30 The fitness and exercise trail Gary Wolf of the Music Department located next to South entrance to faculty will present an evening of Speaker. William F. Brown of THURSDAY, APRIL 23 campus is just waiting for your music for violin and piano. Music Texaco, Inc., will speak on "Coal presence. Run your way to fun and Baseball. Florida Southern College. Rehearsal Hall, 8 p.m. Admission: Gasification." Sponsored by the health. Home field, 3:15 p.m. $2 at the door. Department of Chemistry. Intramural Sports Speaker. Kenneth Wagner of Chemistry Building, Room 208, 7 p.m. Call John Idoux, x2251. American ENKA, Enka, N.C., will SUNDAY, APRIL 26 Entries are due next week for discuss "Synthetic Elastomers." Intramural Floor Hockey (April 29) Free Concert. UCF's Florida Youth and Coed Tube Water Polo (April Chemistry Building, Room 208, FRIDAY, MAY 1 Wind Ensemble, comprised of 50 30). 7 p.m. Call John Idoux, x2251. high school musicians under the Business Day Get your team together or sign direction of Jerry Gardner. SC Movie. "Halloween." SC up individually at the Off ice of FRIDAY, APRIL 24 Auditorium, 3 p.m. Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Admission: Recreational Services, next to the Men'sTennis. Florida Institute of Movie. "The Hunter." SC $1.25. pool. Page 8 The UCF Report

WMMmmMMMmm Employment Opportunities M Career The University of Central Florida is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Opportunity &y Fkmda Solar Ehet Action Employer. Line 275- Scheduled for early development Personnel Services lists the following microcomputers. $16,265.52-$21,882.24, in a word processing center. Contract & is a $ m all Com m u nity Sol a r vacancies, by title, department minimum $623.20. 04/24. Grant position. $10,878.48-$ 14,261.04, Th er ma I Power £xper i me nt (S CS E) $416.80.04/23. qualifications, annual salary range, bi­ Psychologist (Counseling and Testing In which a parabolic dish system weekly salary, and closing date. It is the Center). Master's degree in psychology and Learning Resources Specialist (Instructional designed for peak production of 1 responsibility of the applicant to one year of experience in psychology Resources). Master's degree in education megawatt of electricity will provide successfully complete any required (experience may include internships and and two years of teaching experience in a power for a small town. The six performance and/or written exams prior to practicums). Prefer background in testing, college or university, one of which shall being considered for a specific job finalist candidates for the test administration, and counseling the have been in a teaching resources Department of Energy program i opening. For information on any required vocational and personal concerns of women. department. Certified as a teacher by the located in South Carolina, P~ exams, as well as further details on these $13,613.76-$18,102.96. $521.60. 04/23. state of Florida. $12,820.32-$ 16,996.32, Kansas, Arizona, South Dakota, positions, contact Personnel, x2771. A $491.20.04/23. listing of available faculty positions within Custodial Worker (Building Services). Ability and Washington. the SUS is available on request at the to follow written and oral instructions. Hours: Clerk Typist III (Computer Services). The community will provide receptionist's desk (ADM 230). 6 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. $6.994.80-$8,393.76, Graduation from high school and two years about 10 acres of land for the $268. 04/30. of typing and/or clerical experience. Written plant, and the local utility will Administrative Secretary II (Psychology; Sociology; and typing exams. $8,017.92$ 10,272.96, provide the interface and the Management Institute). Graduation from high $307.20. 04/30. connection with the grid or local and Professional school and one year of secretarial and/or Clerk II (Housing). Graduation from high utility distribution network. clerical experience. Written and typing school and one year of clerical experience. During the experiment, Associate Director for Business (FSEC, Cape exams. Psychology prefers experience with Written exam. $6,994.80-$8,393.76, $268. performance data will be collected, Canaveral). Master's degree required with student records. Sociology—temporary 04/30. and the system will be evaluated five to seven years of budgetary and position through Sept. 10, 1981, and prefers Clerk III (Bookstore). Graduation from high administrative experience in a major familiarity with campus procedures. with respect to real-world school and two years of general clerical university or university system. Prefer M.S. Management Institute prefers shorthand operating factors such as utility experience. Written exam. Prefer either in management, finance, higher education, and is a Contract and Grant position. interface, public acceptance, bookstore experience or experience in administration, or public administration; - $7,662.96-$9,771.84, $293.60. 04/23; environmental effects, and legal reading invoices and credit memos from experience in general management or 04/30; 04/30. issues. Operation of the plant will publishing companies. Contract and Grant administration, especially in a state agency continue for one year, with an Audio-Visual Technician (Instructional position. $7,662.96-$9,771.84, $293.60. or state university. Position is responsible option to continue for a second for budget, accounting, purchasing, Resources). Graduation from high school 04/30. year. personnel, and contract/grant administration. and one year of experience in clerical, store $18,000-$29,000, $692.31.04/24. keeping, or equipment maintenance work. The module design revolves Monday through Friday, rotating shifts: OPS Temporary around a 12-meter-diameter, sun- 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 1-9:30 p.m. $8,853.12- tracking parabolic dish being Career Service $11,421.36, $339.20.04/30. developed by the General Electric Operating Engineer II (Utility Plant). Secretary III (Information Services). Graduation from high school and two years Space Division, and an organic Account Clerk II (Finance and Accounting). Graduation from high school and two years Rankine power conversion unit. of experience in the operation and of secretarial and/or clerical experience. Graduation from high school including or The Rankine engine will operate at maintenance of steam boilers and related Written and typing exams. Prefer experience supplemented by a course in bookkeeping a turbine-in let temperature of equipment. Rotating shifts every six weeks. and familiarity with university procedures or accounting and two years of bookkeeping and forms. May 15 through Aug. 14, 1981. about 700° F. or accounting experience. Written exam. $ 10,878.48-$ 14,261.04. $416.80. 04/30. $4.24/hour. 04/23. According to DOE, there are $8,017.92-$10.272.96, $307.20. 04/23. Word Processing System Operations three characteristics of the small Supervisor (Auxiliary Services). Graduation Clerk Typist III (Personnel). Graduation community which make it a Scientific Programmer (Computer Science). from high school and two years of typing from high school and five years of particularly attractive market for Four-year degree in computer science, data secretarial and/or typing experience. Prefer and/or clerical experience. Written and this technology. First, many such processing, engineering, math, or natural responsible work in supervising all activities typing exams. $3.84/hour. 04/30. science, and two years experience in communities already have a need computer programming or systems analysis. for near-term alternatives to high- A master's degree may be substituted for cost electrical or thermal energy, one year's experience. Prefer experience/ University community as their electrical power is training on VAX 11/780 and typicafly supplied by diesefs, old gains new members oil- or gas-fired plants, or a non­ resident utility transmitting power over long distance. The UCF Report We welcome the following new nursery. He and his wife, Jewell, faculty and staff to the University: have three children and live in Second, many small towns are The UCF Report is published Altamonte Springs. His hobbies relatively isolated—i.e., remote every Wednesday during the Cindy Hornung (clerk typist III, include golf and shopwork. from ready fuel supplies, not academic year, and bi-weekly Engineering) originally is from Jose A. Sepulveda (associate connected to the grid, or located in during the summer, at a cost of Columbus, Ohio, and previously professor, Industrial Engineering) an area for which an energy $166 or 7.5 cents per copy. For worked as a student assistant in originally is from Chile and where supply has not yet been provided. further information on any the dean's office of the College of he graduated from the University Third, the needs of many small material appearing in this Engineering. A UCF grad, she of Santa Maria with a B.S. in communities are best served by a publication, contact K.G. holds a B.S.B.A. in marketing, and chemical engineering. He holds a Sheinkopf, director, Office of enjoys sewing, gardening, cooking, master's degree in public health be located nearby and controlled Information Services, and macrame. Cindy and her and a Ph.D. in industrial by the users. Administration Building 395-K, husband, Robert, live in Orlando. engineering from the University of phone 275-2504. *& "Jt* "JL* ""JL* *X" *X* *X* *•!* *& *A* •*!* **!' •*!-* NI* "si* *•!* *A* •si* *>!* *-i* JoAnne Mcintosh (buyer, Pittsburgh, and previously worked *T* *y* *y* *y% *Y* *T* *T* ^r^ ^r* *T* ^^ ^^ ^* ^* ^p *T^ ^^ ^r^ *T^ *T* Deadline for all submitted Bookstore) received her B.S. with the Health Operations material is Thursday noon of the degree from SUNY at Buffalo and Research Group on that campus. week preceding publication. is a native of New York. She has He and his wife, Fabiola, have •* *• Classified For assistance in publicizing owned a giftshop in Indian three children. programs or events in the local Harbour Beach, Fla., managed a Leaving the University are %. For Rent: New efficiency media, call Bill Daum, Public clothing store in Orlando's Fashion Debra Breakey (Computer •K* oceanfront condo, Cocoa Affairs, 275-2848. Square, and worked for Keyes Real Services), Linda Browning Estate. JoAnne has three children (Personnel), Pamela Cobb ^ Beach. Available May 10-15. % Editor: Maxine Bowers and lives in Casselberry. (Registrar), Rosalie Creamer •X- Sleeps 2-4. Lighted tennis •* Editorial Assistant: Jackie Wartell Abbott Pbzefsky (program (Housing), Betty Godwin (Student * courts, racquetball, pools, tf Photographer: Jon Findell director, STAC, College of Affairs), John Marquardt ^. restaurant, lounge, billiards, •& Engineering) was born in Nyack, (Accountancy), Diane McMillen •* Nautilus equipment, sauna. UCF N.Y., and received a B.S. in (Health Services), Martha Miller £ $22 per night. Call 671 -0697. # Information ceramic engineering from Alfred (Health Services), Patricia Moses •X- For Rent: House in -X- Services University and a Ph.D. in (Sociology), Lily Quagliotti 1£ Goldenrod area. 3 bedroom, 2 $ chemistry from Carnegie-Mellon (Business Administration), .& bath, living and family rooms, <& University. He formerly was Kathleen Reynolds (Computer jj£ large screened porch, 2-car employed by General Electric Co. Services), William Stone .^ garage, solar water heater, %. as manager of engineering and (Transportation), Judith Taylor •Xr many extras. $485/mo. Call •* director of R&D positions, and has (Athletics), and Kenneth Wartell * 678-6284. £ been owner/operator of a plant (Personnel).