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mmMMMMMmnwi/// "AND Environment' students get some helping hands in tfleir paper drive from Student Government president-elect Steve Adamick (far left) and former vice president Charles Simpson (far right). Students collecting waste papers for recycling are Tommy Thomson (foreground) and Kenneth Cox, Tom Deppen and Bob Moore (left to right on truck). Not pictured is Larry Lloyd. (Photo by Ike Spinos.) Bits, Pieces Of Band Appear For Formal Only bits and pieces of the Atlanta-based "Bits and Pieces" band were present at Saturday night's Spring Formal, held at the Granada Room of the Park Plaza. The bits and pieces were the members of the band who arrived on the scene at about 9:30 pjn., minus their equipment which was held up in Ocala. The instruments and amplifiers finally arrived after midnight, but the band did not set up because the crowd had thinned out and few couples were remaining. Village Center officials managed to secure an alternate band which played until midnight. The combo, led by Ron Galli, played basically cocktail lounge music. FTU concerts and dances have recently been plagued with problems, mostly concerning scheduled groups not showing up. Village Center Discontinues 'Who's Who' FTU will not participate in the Who's Who Among Students In American Universities and Colleges this year Village Center assistant program director Linda Eastman said Tuesday. Only 14 of the 52 applications received during the two years the program has been in effect at FTU have qualified. Requirements demand more than an overall 3.0 grade point average. Other qualifications include an accumulated 120 quarter hours with 30 of those hours at FTU, junior standing, leadership in extra-curricular and scholastic activities on campus at FTU, a clear financial record, no record of probation or disciplinary action and no previous listing in the college Who's Who. In the first year only about half of the 30 nominated students were outstanding leaders in university activities. Mrs. Eastman also said that this year, all 22 nominations were scholastically oriented. Mrs. Eastman said that the Who's Who committee decided that student interest is minimal, and recommended that the program be discontinued. She said "The award holds no attraction to our students and carries no redeeming values," She added that the winning students receive neither special individual nor (Continued on Page 12) We Live in the Present, By the Past, but for the. . Activities Fee Budget Exceeds $886,000 Activity and Service Fee allocations were released this week by the Student Affairs office. The total amount of activity and service money allocated was $713,000. Additionally, the total amount of estimated balance and other incomes was $173,600, making the total budget $886,600. These figures are based on an enrollment of 6,400 students, substituting 40 per cent of that New Lots To Be Completed By Fall An addition of 900 new parking spaces will be completed by fall quarter at an expansion cost of $140,000. The announcement was made last week by President Charles Millican. Department of Transportation cleared for parking in the past three officials stated that there will be a years. special letting of bids for the new spaces on June 8. Construction of the lots wfll take place during the summer quarter in order to be ready by fall. Two hundred of the new spaces wfll be located adjacent to the art The first was the Billie Joe Royal concert in November of 1969 when Royal's verbal agreement to appear at FTU was all but ignored when he cancelled to pursue a tour for his newest recording. The second cancellation involved "Box Tops" in a December 1970 concert. The "Box Tops" agency contacted the Village Center on the day of the dance and said they (Box Tops) may not be able to perform for the entire time period contracted. Instead of leaving early, they didn't show up. Fortunately, another rock band, "In the Beginning," was secured. This year's spring formal was actually a rather dismal affair, with students dressed in formal attire milling around the hotel waiting for a band to show up. The nearly 200 students who attended were patient with the problems, but most left early. Village Center officials this week expressed apologies for the failure of the instruments to show up and explained that everything possible was done to expedite the arrival of both the instruments and the back-up band. Additionally, members of Bits and Pieces apologized for their failure to appear. The Village Center refunded ticket money on request at the dance and continued to do so until Tuesday of this week. As of Tuesday, $272 had been refunded. Printing Costs To Be Given All state universities will be required to label all publications as to cost and purpose beginning July 1. This littlepublicizedmeasure was passed by the 1972 Legislature. Senate Bill 1152 calls for every state agency (including state universities) which publishes public documents to print on each publication the annual cost of the publication and its purpose. The following statement is required: "This public document was promulgated at an annual cost of ($ ) or ($ ) per copy to (statement of purpose)." Other specifications require that the statement "shall be printed in (Continued on Page 12) The existing situation is that there are 8,400 vehicles registered on campus, with paved parking facilities for 1,250 of them and unpaved spaces located all over campus for the remainder. Student unrest over the parking complexes on the south side of situation began as early as 1968 with campus. The other spaces will be student complaints concerning the located in the northeast section near unavailability of paved spaces after 9 the site of the as yet unbuilt Humanities and Fine Arts Building. The 900 new spaces will not be topped with asphalt initially, in order to have them ready by September. The facility will utilize a soil cement technique which will allow greater ease in conversion to a permanent lot. The lot will be reached via the paved road from a.m. These complaints were extended with the advent of unpaved spaces which brought problems with getting stuck in the sand, for locations from buildings, and problems associated with sand and inclement weather. The most positive and successful student-oriented movement occured in late February when members o f Alafaya Trail which now leads to the Kappa Sigma Fraternity sponsored a parking area behind the Library petition drive for improved parking Building. facilities. The petition brought The Department of almost immediate results from the Transportation will look into the university, the State Department of feasility of constructing connected Transportation and the Board of roads on campus that will link Regents, which included a visit from parking areas, according to Millican. FTU has had parking problems since fall of 1968 when the university opened with approximately 900 spaces and approximately 2,000 students, faculty and staff members. Since that time, one additional paved parking area has been built, that being the lot on the west side of the Administration Building which was constructed in 1970, making a total of 1,250 paved spaces. Additionally, several unpaved areas have been a DOT official. Campus Glances MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY There will be no classes Monday in observance of the Memorial Day weekend. All students, faculty and staff wfll have the day off, with classes to resume at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Have a safe weekend. figure (or 2,560 students) for summer quarter. Each student contributes $34.50 per quarter from his tuition for activity and service budgets. Intercollegiate Athletics has been budgeted $104,450 from the Activity and Service Fee (A and SF), and an estimated $43,000 in income, for a total of $147,450. The Student Health Center will receive $123,204 from A and SF and is estimated to make approximately $16,000 for a total budget of $139,204. This budget figure will allow for expanded services from the Health Center, such as the recently approved birth control program. Additionally, it includes some expansion. The Village Center has been budgeted the greatest amount of money, with $130,071 from A and SF and an estimated $20,600 in income for a total of $150,671. A total of $71,808 has been budgeted for Student Insurance. This includes A and SF funds of $70,808 and estimated balance and other income of $1,000. Other allocations include Intramurals, $56,650 A and SF and $3,000 other income, for a total of $59,650; Extramurals, total budget of $10,915; Orientation, total budget of $4,000; Student Handbook, total budget of $5,000; PEGASUS, $10,325 A and SF and $11,000 other income, for a total of $21,325, and FuTUre, $12,275 A and SF and $19,500 other income, for a total of $31,775. The FuTUre and PEGASUS publications are the only departments or organizations which have a larger estimated balance and other income than their allocation from the Activity and Service Fee. "Florida Review," FTU's literary magazine, did not receive an allocation. Committee members recommended the allocation be delayed until the magazine was published. The committee will meet with representatives of "Florida Review" to discuss an allocation in the near future. The theatre department received a total allocation of $3,500. (Continued on Page 12) STUDENTS WEREN'T the only ones who enjoyed Student Government's spring picnic at Lake Claire. Vice President for Student Affairs W. Rex Brown .'far left) joins the crowd waiting for a steak or hamburger or hot dog or baked beans or ... . (Photo by Jon Findc-!1
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Transcript | mmMMMMMmnwi/// "AND Environment' students get some helping hands in tfleir paper drive from Student Government president-elect Steve Adamick (far left) and former vice president Charles Simpson (far right). Students collecting waste papers for recycling are Tommy Thomson (foreground) and Kenneth Cox, Tom Deppen and Bob Moore (left to right on truck). Not pictured is Larry Lloyd. (Photo by Ike Spinos.) Bits, Pieces Of Band Appear For Formal Only bits and pieces of the Atlanta-based "Bits and Pieces" band were present at Saturday night's Spring Formal, held at the Granada Room of the Park Plaza. The bits and pieces were the members of the band who arrived on the scene at about 9:30 pjn., minus their equipment which was held up in Ocala. The instruments and amplifiers finally arrived after midnight, but the band did not set up because the crowd had thinned out and few couples were remaining. Village Center officials managed to secure an alternate band which played until midnight. The combo, led by Ron Galli, played basically cocktail lounge music. FTU concerts and dances have recently been plagued with problems, mostly concerning scheduled groups not showing up. Village Center Discontinues 'Who's Who' FTU will not participate in the Who's Who Among Students In American Universities and Colleges this year Village Center assistant program director Linda Eastman said Tuesday. Only 14 of the 52 applications received during the two years the program has been in effect at FTU have qualified. Requirements demand more than an overall 3.0 grade point average. Other qualifications include an accumulated 120 quarter hours with 30 of those hours at FTU, junior standing, leadership in extra-curricular and scholastic activities on campus at FTU, a clear financial record, no record of probation or disciplinary action and no previous listing in the college Who's Who. In the first year only about half of the 30 nominated students were outstanding leaders in university activities. Mrs. Eastman also said that this year, all 22 nominations were scholastically oriented. Mrs. Eastman said that the Who's Who committee decided that student interest is minimal, and recommended that the program be discontinued. She said "The award holds no attraction to our students and carries no redeeming values," She added that the winning students receive neither special individual nor (Continued on Page 12) We Live in the Present, By the Past, but for the. . Activities Fee Budget Exceeds $886,000 Activity and Service Fee allocations were released this week by the Student Affairs office. The total amount of activity and service money allocated was $713,000. Additionally, the total amount of estimated balance and other incomes was $173,600, making the total budget $886,600. These figures are based on an enrollment of 6,400 students, substituting 40 per cent of that New Lots To Be Completed By Fall An addition of 900 new parking spaces will be completed by fall quarter at an expansion cost of $140,000. The announcement was made last week by President Charles Millican. Department of Transportation cleared for parking in the past three officials stated that there will be a years. special letting of bids for the new spaces on June 8. Construction of the lots wfll take place during the summer quarter in order to be ready by fall. Two hundred of the new spaces wfll be located adjacent to the art The first was the Billie Joe Royal concert in November of 1969 when Royal's verbal agreement to appear at FTU was all but ignored when he cancelled to pursue a tour for his newest recording. The second cancellation involved "Box Tops" in a December 1970 concert. The "Box Tops" agency contacted the Village Center on the day of the dance and said they (Box Tops) may not be able to perform for the entire time period contracted. Instead of leaving early, they didn't show up. Fortunately, another rock band, "In the Beginning," was secured. This year's spring formal was actually a rather dismal affair, with students dressed in formal attire milling around the hotel waiting for a band to show up. The nearly 200 students who attended were patient with the problems, but most left early. Village Center officials this week expressed apologies for the failure of the instruments to show up and explained that everything possible was done to expedite the arrival of both the instruments and the back-up band. Additionally, members of Bits and Pieces apologized for their failure to appear. The Village Center refunded ticket money on request at the dance and continued to do so until Tuesday of this week. As of Tuesday, $272 had been refunded. Printing Costs To Be Given All state universities will be required to label all publications as to cost and purpose beginning July 1. This littlepublicizedmeasure was passed by the 1972 Legislature. Senate Bill 1152 calls for every state agency (including state universities) which publishes public documents to print on each publication the annual cost of the publication and its purpose. The following statement is required: "This public document was promulgated at an annual cost of ($ ) or ($ ) per copy to (statement of purpose)." Other specifications require that the statement "shall be printed in (Continued on Page 12) The existing situation is that there are 8,400 vehicles registered on campus, with paved parking facilities for 1,250 of them and unpaved spaces located all over campus for the remainder. Student unrest over the parking complexes on the south side of situation began as early as 1968 with campus. The other spaces will be student complaints concerning the located in the northeast section near unavailability of paved spaces after 9 the site of the as yet unbuilt Humanities and Fine Arts Building. The 900 new spaces will not be topped with asphalt initially, in order to have them ready by September. The facility will utilize a soil cement technique which will allow greater ease in conversion to a permanent lot. The lot will be reached via the paved road from a.m. These complaints were extended with the advent of unpaved spaces which brought problems with getting stuck in the sand, for locations from buildings, and problems associated with sand and inclement weather. The most positive and successful student-oriented movement occured in late February when members o f Alafaya Trail which now leads to the Kappa Sigma Fraternity sponsored a parking area behind the Library petition drive for improved parking Building. facilities. The petition brought The Department of almost immediate results from the Transportation will look into the university, the State Department of feasility of constructing connected Transportation and the Board of roads on campus that will link Regents, which included a visit from parking areas, according to Millican. FTU has had parking problems since fall of 1968 when the university opened with approximately 900 spaces and approximately 2,000 students, faculty and staff members. Since that time, one additional paved parking area has been built, that being the lot on the west side of the Administration Building which was constructed in 1970, making a total of 1,250 paved spaces. Additionally, several unpaved areas have been a DOT official. Campus Glances MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY There will be no classes Monday in observance of the Memorial Day weekend. All students, faculty and staff wfll have the day off, with classes to resume at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Have a safe weekend. figure (or 2,560 students) for summer quarter. Each student contributes $34.50 per quarter from his tuition for activity and service budgets. Intercollegiate Athletics has been budgeted $104,450 from the Activity and Service Fee (A and SF), and an estimated $43,000 in income, for a total of $147,450. The Student Health Center will receive $123,204 from A and SF and is estimated to make approximately $16,000 for a total budget of $139,204. This budget figure will allow for expanded services from the Health Center, such as the recently approved birth control program. Additionally, it includes some expansion. The Village Center has been budgeted the greatest amount of money, with $130,071 from A and SF and an estimated $20,600 in income for a total of $150,671. A total of $71,808 has been budgeted for Student Insurance. This includes A and SF funds of $70,808 and estimated balance and other income of $1,000. Other allocations include Intramurals, $56,650 A and SF and $3,000 other income, for a total of $59,650; Extramurals, total budget of $10,915; Orientation, total budget of $4,000; Student Handbook, total budget of $5,000; PEGASUS, $10,325 A and SF and $11,000 other income, for a total of $21,325, and FuTUre, $12,275 A and SF and $19,500 other income, for a total of $31,775. The FuTUre and PEGASUS publications are the only departments or organizations which have a larger estimated balance and other income than their allocation from the Activity and Service Fee. "Florida Review," FTU's literary magazine, did not receive an allocation. Committee members recommended the allocation be delayed until the magazine was published. The committee will meet with representatives of "Florida Review" to discuss an allocation in the near future. The theatre department received a total allocation of $3,500. (Continued on Page 12) STUDENTS WEREN'T the only ones who enjoyed Student Government's spring picnic at Lake Claire. Vice President for Student Affairs W. Rex Brown .'far left) joins the crowd waiting for a steak or hamburger or hot dog or baked beans or ... . (Photo by Jon Findc-!1 |
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