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FTU Charter Class Graduates wmmiiu/// We Live in the Present, By the Past, but for the. . Young Tells 422 Grads World must Be Saved I'l.iu hundred end twenty*two students received their, iher mday in Florids Technological University's charter graduation al tin- Orlando Municipal Auditorium The commencement program was highlighted by John Young, Gemini snd Apollo astronaul from Orlando, He was introduced by Presidenl Charles N. Mllli<»naa "sharing a common desire | oyAFB with^TU; we both like to reach fc „,,.„. M)lljr;u) spok(. o) ^ (iu.'.i ipeakei Voungemphasized '•«■■«'"•'•"■■■■'■-•■» ss "another first", the relationship between the pace '■•""""•'" yand ram and rebels In his Powth "' I'IU" "• bis opening commencement speech to PTU remirki "We must sel our course gredu Lobes rebel •""l '""'■'• forward", he added within a cause; I know, I've been one all my 111•- He spoke ol "impoii.nn quality to build •■ belter world ""Wh.ii happens to the world depends on ' hs Individual 11 no reason thai lib- can ' be made bettei on iin*. planet,except ..in challenge in lumming up the qualil I he i'.hi v I'l.,iform coi tl ' !hapman, Registrar; Allen TroviUian, i-'i i' Foundation; Dr J P < rOI .nt for Bu Affairs; Dr W Rei Brown, Vice Student Affairs; Chaplain Riedi array, Board oi R John H Bolte, • mil' Affairs; William K. mmunicationa; and build """K" conr • iperation, devotion John Young receives honorary degree Flag W/aver's Lawyers Drop FTU Involvement ■ an FTL' coed who was arrest, display of th«* American flag, urt hearing last would nr ■ lr»r (institutional hassle. Attorneys left the door open. ••r, for lat«*r action against the university in th«- case in% sophomore Melissa Lee. Lee, 19, Fort Lauderdale, was taken into custody May 6 during a demonstration in fr the Library Building. She was charged with flying an American flag upside down Ht-r law. | n and David Gluckman, petitioned federal court last week, asking the court to stop state court prosecut Lee pending a constitutional teat of the Florida law government destruction of a flag. District Court Judge George C. Young, flanked by a large U.S. flag, heard arguments—some of which were philosophical and heated—then reserved ruling on the matter. Melissa testified briefly, explaining that she flew thr inverted flag (an international distress signal) "to demonstrate we are against the killings at Kent State University and President Nixon's unlawful entry into Cambod; The injunction petition named county court officials and FTU as defendant*, nut fctomstein ind m* against Attending thr hearing Presit! as Millican. Student Affairs \ Brown and Business A s Lee received p. demonstration from Dr i owe all- o Ihe . haired girl was BSlu lad Miss Lee said weeks of study remaining. I'vr-n after Classes for Spring trrm had • "because I missed so man-, these I. Metises also was in th( nnrl Department, but was apparently working in some rapacity in thr Psych' after the beefing thai she plans to return to Tecfa in the fall "Any action of thr irt in this matter would ba s direct attack on free spi ild. men! brought an (Continued on Paom 4) hope. nation, innovation, invention, risibility, s4-ii discipline, and understanding, sell) up U Young mil tin- problem Apollo 13 citing th<- "technical knowledge and pline thai s.i\.-i| then 11ii ol oi'- help from all 01 irld in the Apollo "then in lo belii ing togethei W world -mil one hums I '-need i it l*l.il(..ri!. auditonun ll..- l-i U Philharm conducted by Arpad Szomoru, musical ■elections-' ■ i.hi Dam .nd 6 of Johannes Brahms • prior to the conferring ol de| ■/liege of Business Administration ngineering granted 4, and Nl as awarded 36 the student their d< | the tassel rom the right to thr luates then si(K>d and across the stage individual recognition. ares honored as the first gredu fulfill ihe . ugust with ac_ l«-nl.»are asked lr» note lhat ihe Jun.- 30 and July 1 and inventory ll will .iImi be rlosrd July if thr boh June seekers. tillrd for It) p m honors were then lauded by ifiSTTl , .den, Milbcan T^' d *" I ..s.ng remark. Milhcn J«»* ared his thoughts of ihe pa* Chaplain it,.,). bebegfnninfol congratulated the gradta Dr. Kissel Named NewCollegeDean Dep Summer Enrollment Is More Than Doubled The summer months are conceived ing tin- la/y 'lays, when everyone takes vacations, relaxes around th<- pool, and sleeps all day. However, such is not the case at FTU. Instead, preliminary summer enrollment figures are more than twice last year's, and 1833 students are currently attending classes during this summer's session. which ''l"M''1 ";irlV m the day. Both Last Tuesday's registration figures thr md education semi show l ,333 students who paid full were filled, and ai one time the fees for the summer, leaving '>00 business seminars were filled. who paid less than full-time tuition. However, the dean of the Bu This is quite a jump over last Administration College extended summer, when only a total of 788 the number of students In each were registered. section by five, and opened tWO Despite the increase in students, more only to have only registration went quite smoothly seven more students register for There were no students those seminars. Humanities was bunched into the rooms for checking filled, but was also increased, and open classes, nor the room for engineering has ten senior iminar drawing computer cards as are usually seen at registration. The only real complaints came in connection with the senior seminars, some of ■ed Ion I, snd Si ill has a few openings. Fall enrollment is estimated al -i head counl of 1,899, both part-time and full-time students. Lunar Soil Fast Grower i the | asked id OUtrighl opponents of pace program How will the moon possibly help US survi-. • For the first lime, publir.illv anyway, an answer was forthcoming onaul John Young, revealed during his COmmencem to III gradual unlay, that may have n about the moon's soil that could save millions of Hves on our own plane! "I I) : "that our • rl the lunar soil to ae if plants Ofl COUld grow in it " He w.-nt on to My thai •> number of the crop d m the supposedly barren mixtun elements thai comprise the dusty ■ it thS moon, grew lli four times faster in the soil than they fio In <-artit toil me mixture can be duplicated on earth," Young stated, Young did not reveal which crops were tested, bul indicated m his comments thai they wen- edible He used tha statement to point out how tin- technically "cold" flights to lh<- Moon, COUld mean .... much to man's battle to save ins own world. I ii. ! DC > iimmu nic Humanities and S<< July 1,19 ; pointed Dean of thr lardC 1968, aflr-r a decade on the tment •d lo head the i 40. who has been the I nivt Texas. Tha new College was formed out of thr of HumaniUr Ihe original I now will be kn. Humanities and Pint i arill continue uled by Dean Charles N Micarelli I) r K hoi in Dommcrich Hilb, Maitland, arith his and their four children, is nixed .is a specialist in -i oining FT! '. In- has Liken on added assignments as ■ memb< I lie I'm. in pus Continuing Kdur.it ion program and • .'lung Of linquislics ,,t (•" | l'\ I>.i\ ii.na Beach <Sen) 1 .rand Rapids, Michigan, Dr Kissel received his and Ph D from tha Mulligan, where he was a member <>f the track and football teams He join e d tha i iiivrisitv «,i Texas faculty in after several •■ iching fellow .md instructor al ins alma v Dr Kism-i has received numerous awards for his scademic .ind civic The College of Humanities and \rts, under Dean Micarelli. will admin irse areas in Arl. Fngbsh. Foreign Languages, Hi Hum.ii' c .md Th« FTU's first home-frown pn>duct has been hired David Murphy will Join the staff .1 programmer/analyst upon his gra.luat ion from FTU this June. David has heen a student assistant programmer in Infoimation mber, 196 Ih.- father oi one girl who was contributions and is the author of suppoaed to graduate, raised quite a many articles on speech and related luss l,,sl w,,,'k when told the girl subjects. He is a life elder of the First would not be one ol the . i• -11.111 < hurch and, locally, is | participants m commencement. member of the Dommerich Hills Although she had been scheduled ill urn and has served on the ln graduate, .1 Check of her hours Orlando Chamber ol Commen mga Juice" commit U In his new position, Dean Kisael will be responsible for the revealed she was short Then was nothing the school could do, •o- Attending class is drenching your Departments ol Communications, brain, taking a test is draining your Political Science, brain, walking to class means Sociology .md Psychology wetting your m
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Transcript |
FTU Charter Class Graduates
wmmiiu///
We Live in the Present,
By the Past, but
for the. .
Young Tells 422 Grads
World must Be Saved
I'l.iu hundred end twenty*two students received their, iher mday
in Florids Technological University's charter graduation al tin- Orlando
Municipal Auditorium The commencement program was highlighted by
John Young, Gemini snd Apollo astronaul from Orlando, He was
introduced by Presidenl Charles N.
Mllli<»naa "sharing a common desire | oyAFB
with^TU; we both like to reach fc „,,.„. M)lljr;u) spok(. o) ^
(iu.'.i ipeakei Voungemphasized '•«■■«'"•'•"■■■■'■-•■» ss "another first",
the relationship between the pace '■•""""•'" yand
ram and rebels In his Powth "' I'IU" "• bis opening
commencement speech to PTU remirki "We must sel our course
gredu Lobes rebel •""l '""'■'• forward", he added
within a cause; I know, I've been one
all my 111•-
He spoke ol
"impoii.nn quality to build •■ belter
world ""Wh.ii happens to the world
depends on ' hs Individual 11
no reason thai lib- can ' be made
bettei on iin*. planet,except
..in challenge
in lumming up the qualil
I he i'.hi v I'l.,iform coi
tl ' !hapman, Registrar; Allen
TroviUian, i-'i i' Foundation; Dr J
P < rOI .nt for Bu
Affairs; Dr W Rei Brown, Vice
Student Affairs;
Chaplain Riedi array,
Board oi R John H Bolte,
• mil' Affairs; William K.
mmunicationa; and
build """K"
conr • iperation, devotion
John Young receives honorary degree
Flag W/aver's Lawyers
Drop FTU Involvement
■ an FTL' coed who was arrest,
display of th«* American flag, urt hearing last
would nr ■ lr»r
(institutional hassle.
Attorneys left the door open.
••r, for lat«*r action against the
university in th«- case in%
sophomore Melissa Lee.
Lee, 19, Fort Lauderdale,
was taken into custody May 6
during a demonstration in fr
the Library Building. She was
charged with flying an American
flag upside down
Ht-r law. | n and
David Gluckman, petitioned federal
court last week, asking the court to
stop state court prosecut
Lee pending a constitutional teat of
the Florida law government
destruction of a flag.
District Court Judge George
C. Young, flanked by a large U.S.
flag, heard arguments—some of
which were philosophical and
heated—then reserved ruling on the
matter.
Melissa testified briefly,
explaining that she flew thr
inverted flag (an international
distress signal) "to demonstrate we
are against the killings at Kent State
University and President Nixon's
unlawful entry into Cambod;
The injunction petition named
county court officials and FTU as
defendant*, nut fctomstein ind
m* against
Attending thr hearing
Presit! as Millican. Student
Affairs \
Brown and Business A
s Lee
received p.
demonstration from Dr
i owe all- o Ihe
.
haired girl was BSlu
lad
Miss Lee said weeks
of study remaining. I'vr-n after
Classes for Spring trrm had •
"because I missed so man-,
these I.
Metises also was
in th( nnrl
Department, but was apparently
working in some rapacity in thr
Psych'
after the beefing thai she plans to
return to Tecfa in the fall
"Any action of thr irt in
this matter would ba s direct attack
on free spi ild.
men! brought an
(Continued on Paom 4)
hope.
nation, innovation, invention,
risibility,
s4-ii discipline, and understanding,
sell) up U
Young
mil tin- problem
Apollo 13 citing th<- "technical
knowledge and pline thai
s.i\.-i| then 11ii ol oi'-
help from all 01 irld in the
Apollo
"then in lo belii
ing togethei W
world -mil one hums I '-need
i it
l*l.il(..ri!.
auditonun
ll..- l-i U Philharm
conducted by Arpad Szomoru,
musical ■elections-'
■ i.hi Dam .nd 6 of
Johannes Brahms • prior to the
conferring ol de|
■/liege
of Business Administration
ngineering granted 4,
and Nl as awarded 36
the student
their d< | the tassel
rom the right to thr
luates then si(K>d and
across the stage
individual recognition.
ares honored as
the first gredu fulfill ihe
. ugust
with ac_
l«-nl.»are asked lr» note lhat ihe
Jun.- 30 and July 1 and
inventory ll will .iImi be rlosrd July
if thr boh
June
seekers.
tillrd
for It) p m
honors were then lauded by
ifiSTTl , .den, Milbcan
T^' d *" I ..s.ng remark. Milhcn
J«»* ared his thoughts of ihe pa*
Chaplain it,.,). bebegfnninfol
congratulated the gradta
Dr. Kissel Named
NewCollegeDean
Dep
Summer Enrollment
Is More Than Doubled
The summer months are conceived ing tin- la/y 'lays, when
everyone takes vacations, relaxes around th<- pool, and sleeps all day.
However, such is not the case at FTU. Instead, preliminary summer
enrollment figures are more than twice last year's, and 1833 students are
currently attending classes during
this summer's session. which ''l"M''1 ";irlV m the day. Both
Last Tuesday's registration figures thr md education semi
show l ,333 students who paid full were filled, and ai one time the
fees for the summer, leaving '>00 business seminars were filled.
who paid less than full-time tuition. However, the dean of the Bu
This is quite a jump over last Administration College extended
summer, when only a total of 788 the number of students In each
were registered. section by five, and opened tWO
Despite the increase in students, more only to have only
registration went quite smoothly seven more students register for
There were no students those seminars. Humanities was
bunched into the rooms for checking filled, but was also increased, and
open classes, nor the room for engineering has ten senior iminar
drawing computer cards as are
usually seen at registration. The only
real complaints came in connection
with the senior seminars, some of
■ed Ion I, snd Si ill has a few openings.
Fall enrollment is estimated al -i
head counl of 1,899, both part-time
and full-time students.
Lunar Soil
Fast Grower
i
the |
asked
id OUtrighl opponents of
pace program
How will the moon possibly help
US survi-. •
For the first lime, publir.illv
anyway, an answer was
forthcoming
onaul John Young, revealed
during his COmmencem
to III gradual unlay, that
may have n
about the moon's
soil that could save millions of Hves
on our own plane!
"I I) :
"that our • rl the
lunar soil to ae if plants Ofl
COUld grow in it "
He w.-nt on to My thai •> number
of the crop d m the
supposedly barren mixtun
elements thai comprise the dusty
■ it thS moon, grew lli
four times faster in the soil than
they fio In <-artit toil
me mixture can be
duplicated on earth," Young stated,
Young did not reveal which crops
were tested, bul indicated m his
comments thai they wen- edible
He used tha statement to point
out how tin- technically "cold"
flights to lh<- Moon, COUld mean ....
much to man's battle to save ins
own world.
I ii. ! DC > iimmu nic
Humanities and S<<
July 1,19
; pointed Dean of thr lardC
1968, aflr-r a decade on the
tment
•d lo head the i
40. who has been
the I nivt Texas.
Tha new College was formed out
of thr of HumaniUr
Ihe original I
now will be kn.
Humanities and Pint i arill
continue uled by Dean
Charles N Micarelli
I) r K hoi in
Dommcrich Hilb, Maitland, arith his
and their four children, is
nixed .is a specialist in -i
oining FT! '. In- has Liken on
added assignments as ■ memb<
I lie I'm. in pus
Continuing Kdur.it ion program and
• .'lung Of linquislics ,,t (•" | l'\
I>.i\ ii.na Beach |
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