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I COEWITY Of MIAMI Lowe Art Gallery To Construct $100,000 Wing 8-Year Wait * Nets Exhibit A $100,000 wing will be built onto the Joe and Em- ilv Lowe Art Gallery on campus to house a permanent art collection which has been sought for eight years, it was announced this week. | Paintings from the famous j Samuel H. Kress Collection are expected here shortly before the new wing opens next November. The building plans, now being completed, provide for two large rooms, divided hy a marble archway. The wing will he located in the gallery's present garden area. Funds for the construction will be donated equally by the Joe and Emily Lowe Foundation and j gallery benefactor Mrs. Nino Bis- j so. a member of the UM Board of j Trustees. The collection was awarded to Ihe Lowe Gallery following eight years' negotiations between University officials and the Kress Foundation Board of Trustees. UM President Jay F. W. Pearson and Gallery Director C. Clay Aldridge represented the I'niversity. Among considerations in selecting cities to receive parts of , Ihe vast art collection were suit- The Mia Vol.. XXXVI. No. 10 University of Miami urncane Coral Gables, Fla. December 2,1960 AND OFFICER STUDY USG Proposes Amendments Allowing For Impeachment FLYING HIGH in the breeze near South Memorial is a dummy of head football coach Anils Gustafson. Along with other comments painted on UM's sidewalks urging Gus to "go home." it skeins someone had lo keep the "tradition" alive: Gus has bean hung in cfligy foi the past four \cars Sec sports editor's comments, page 14. Fire Marshall Hunting San Sebastian Arsonist A deliberately-set fire in San Sebastian Men's Residence Hall has brought Florida authorities into that dormitory's set of continuing disturbances. "While we can't be completely' sure that the person who set the ers out into the night. Two pumo fire was a UM student, we are wagons, one hook-and-ladder acting under that assumption," truck and one emergency truck By LEONARD TEEL Hurricaie NfWi IttUt A move to plug up loopholes in the Undergraduate Student Government constitution was put in motion Monday. One major proposal would provide for impeachment of student officials. A second proposed amendment is aimed at determining more clearly the qualifications and responsibilities of student officers. Both proposals will be voted on by the council within three days. They were drawn up and presented at Uie weekly meeting by William Cornell, USG attorney general. The impeachment clause was added to make the constitution more functional. "If a constitution is to be the rules by which you plan on governing yourselves, then the answers to every question must be in it," explained Max Sudakow, USG Council Representative from the Engineering School. "It is the duty of the writers to anticipate problems that might arise," he added. The impeachment amendment states that "any member nf the student body may initiate impeachment proceedings by filing a written complaint . . . with the secretary of the council." council would then ap- a special committee to PRESIDENT PEARSON Helps- Secure Exhibit able housing, assurance of adequate maintenance and protection and availability to the community. One of 18 similar gifts by the Kress Foundation to galleries throughout the country, the col- Irition coming here will eontiin 33 paintings and three sculptures by Italian. French and North German artists of the 14th through 18th centuries. The Kress collection, which before its dispersal was the world's largest private collection of four untunes of Italian art, was purchased by the Kress family ovc some 40 years. said Phillip Campbell, assisting dean of men. "This fire was no prank." said Campbell. "The state fire marshal! isn't looking for a college 'jokester': he's after a criminal arsonist." When the authorities find the pcrson(s) responsible for the Nov 20 blaze, said Campbell, he (or were on hand from the Cora' Gables Fire Department to quell the by-then smoldering blaze This is the third reported fire at the dormitory this semester, said Campbell. However, he pointed out that only the last fire is known to have been deliberately set. San Sab has been the scene thev) will be expelled from the of pranksterism (firecrackers. University to face criminal arrest. bomb scares' etc > for the Pasl [ two years, reported some of 'he The fire broke out in a Uni- dorm residents. versify Bookstore storeroom al ..-,. „ „, 0 c , , ,i " i , The men at San Sab have the men s dorm. . , , ,. _., calmed down greatly. Oh, tnere At 1:44 a.m. that Saturday mor- are probably sUU some jokers ning. the fire alarm went off. j over there," said Campbell, "but sending San Sab's 283 male sleep they won't last." Baud, Twirlers Will Go To Guatemala The UM Band of the Hour and i the Hurricanettcs this week be- I gan preparing for the Centra! American Fair in Guatemala, March 10-20. The Guatemalan government, which is sponsoring the band's trip, sent an invitation to UM President Dr. Jay F. W. Pearson. \ During its visit, the band will perform some of the half-time j shows of the past football season, as well as some of the concert works from its upcoming February state concert tour, said Band Director Fred McCall. He said that the band and Hur- ricanettes have also been askr 1 to form a basketball team to com- '' pete with Guatemalan teams Th. point "investigate the complaint and prosecute." The council itself can then try the accused. A 70 per cent vote of the 14 council members (10) would be necessary to remove the defendant from office. Another method of initiating impeachment proceedings is by petition of 40 per cent of the council members. In either case, an impeached officer "may file an appeal with the Board of Review" which passes on all student government actions. The second amendment to the constitution prescribes the general responsibilities of the USG president, vice president and treasurer. It adds the qualification that each of these officers "shall be at least a junior as of the September after election." The proposal also delegates the director of student activities as secretary "without voting power." Are You A Bottle Baby? OK Blood Drive On Tuesday UM students will be asked to give blood Tuesday to build up their own reserve or earmark it ; for another person. Chairman Fred Berney of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternitv ' said that a few girls will be there ' to hold the boys' hands, if neces- j sary. Students can give blood to the . John Elliott Blood Bank Tuesdav ! at 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. in the Student Union. ROTC cadets will have their drive the next day at 3'3n . p.m. in the Armory- Those under 21 must obtain special slips at the Student Union Information Booth or at the APO Bookstore, Temporary Building 94, to be signed by their parents j or guardians. Ain't That Sweet? Lory Rockwell, a senior Hum- canette, yesterday was chosen the sweetheart of the trombone section of the UM band. Miami's top legal expert said yesterday that you CAN tote a concealed bottle of booze into the Orange Bowl for tonight's UM-Air Force football game. But there's a catch—you can't take a sip. Richard Gerstein, state's attorney for Dade County, ventured those opinions in response to a Miami Herald article quoting Florida's At torncy General Richard Er- virj as saying: "Certainly it is illegal for police officers to search spectators at the stadium (Orange Bowl) hy merely stopping them as they enter." A student told the Hurricane that police made him unscrew the top of his binoculars for fear he was con cealing some liquor. This, according to Ervin. "would be unconstitutional." HOWEVER, Police Lt. Richard Meyers, boss of the City of Miami Liquor Squad, *-airl that he knew of no such incident. He said that the police force would search Plltll si fill Grill PLOW INC; Ol'T of the shallow* last h\ the dying sun along driftwood-lined shores is our Hurricane Honey, loan 1 ipson. I he junior is an art major, and this kind of art is our cup of lea. Bugs In Bells 'n5 Buzzers Bog Down Brain Battle someone if he had a "visible container of liquor." "We are there only to protect the rights of all citizens." he remarked. taerstein said the police can legally search some a ana- only if they have a warrant or are making an arrest. In separate interviews, assistant City of Miami attorneys John Lloyd and Ed Fitzpatrick pointed to City Code 42:25 as the only Miam1 ordinance which covers dunking in Uie Orange Bowl. The code, the attorneys said, stalls that it's illegal to drink liquor in the Orange Bowl "before, during or after an event in the stadium." Missing buzzers, bells and University College-sponsored tournament. Assistant History Professor Vaughan Camp, emcee, said that engineering students are still in the process of building the various apparatus. The tournament was to begin last Monday. Now, the opening contest of the future weekly quiz events will be sometime before Christmas, said Camp. The 33 teams which were ready for competition decided Tues.lav on the pairings of teams when the contests do begin. Groups can still sign up in Camp's Ashe Building seconr' floor office. lights postponed the first "Battle of Brains" quiz All Gone Now Monday night's Dade County Auditorium performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony is completely sold out. announced the UM Symphony office yesterday. Tickets are still available for Sunday night's performance at Miami Beach Auditorium, they said. This is the first reading of the famous "Choral" Symphony in the Miami area. See complete story, page 12.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, December 02, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-12-02 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (16 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | MHC_19601202 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19601202 |
Digital ID | MHC_19601202_001 |
Full Text | I COEWITY Of MIAMI Lowe Art Gallery To Construct $100,000 Wing 8-Year Wait * Nets Exhibit A $100,000 wing will be built onto the Joe and Em- ilv Lowe Art Gallery on campus to house a permanent art collection which has been sought for eight years, it was announced this week. | Paintings from the famous j Samuel H. Kress Collection are expected here shortly before the new wing opens next November. The building plans, now being completed, provide for two large rooms, divided hy a marble archway. The wing will he located in the gallery's present garden area. Funds for the construction will be donated equally by the Joe and Emily Lowe Foundation and j gallery benefactor Mrs. Nino Bis- j so. a member of the UM Board of j Trustees. The collection was awarded to Ihe Lowe Gallery following eight years' negotiations between University officials and the Kress Foundation Board of Trustees. UM President Jay F. W. Pearson and Gallery Director C. Clay Aldridge represented the I'niversity. Among considerations in selecting cities to receive parts of , Ihe vast art collection were suit- The Mia Vol.. XXXVI. No. 10 University of Miami urncane Coral Gables, Fla. December 2,1960 AND OFFICER STUDY USG Proposes Amendments Allowing For Impeachment FLYING HIGH in the breeze near South Memorial is a dummy of head football coach Anils Gustafson. Along with other comments painted on UM's sidewalks urging Gus to "go home." it skeins someone had lo keep the "tradition" alive: Gus has bean hung in cfligy foi the past four \cars Sec sports editor's comments, page 14. Fire Marshall Hunting San Sebastian Arsonist A deliberately-set fire in San Sebastian Men's Residence Hall has brought Florida authorities into that dormitory's set of continuing disturbances. "While we can't be completely' sure that the person who set the ers out into the night. Two pumo fire was a UM student, we are wagons, one hook-and-ladder acting under that assumption," truck and one emergency truck By LEONARD TEEL Hurricaie NfWi IttUt A move to plug up loopholes in the Undergraduate Student Government constitution was put in motion Monday. One major proposal would provide for impeachment of student officials. A second proposed amendment is aimed at determining more clearly the qualifications and responsibilities of student officers. Both proposals will be voted on by the council within three days. They were drawn up and presented at Uie weekly meeting by William Cornell, USG attorney general. The impeachment clause was added to make the constitution more functional. "If a constitution is to be the rules by which you plan on governing yourselves, then the answers to every question must be in it," explained Max Sudakow, USG Council Representative from the Engineering School. "It is the duty of the writers to anticipate problems that might arise," he added. The impeachment amendment states that "any member nf the student body may initiate impeachment proceedings by filing a written complaint . . . with the secretary of the council." council would then ap- a special committee to PRESIDENT PEARSON Helps- Secure Exhibit able housing, assurance of adequate maintenance and protection and availability to the community. One of 18 similar gifts by the Kress Foundation to galleries throughout the country, the col- Irition coming here will eontiin 33 paintings and three sculptures by Italian. French and North German artists of the 14th through 18th centuries. The Kress collection, which before its dispersal was the world's largest private collection of four untunes of Italian art, was purchased by the Kress family ovc some 40 years. said Phillip Campbell, assisting dean of men. "This fire was no prank." said Campbell. "The state fire marshal! isn't looking for a college 'jokester': he's after a criminal arsonist." When the authorities find the pcrson(s) responsible for the Nov 20 blaze, said Campbell, he (or were on hand from the Cora' Gables Fire Department to quell the by-then smoldering blaze This is the third reported fire at the dormitory this semester, said Campbell. However, he pointed out that only the last fire is known to have been deliberately set. San Sab has been the scene thev) will be expelled from the of pranksterism (firecrackers. University to face criminal arrest. bomb scares' etc > for the Pasl [ two years, reported some of 'he The fire broke out in a Uni- dorm residents. versify Bookstore storeroom al ..-,. „ „, 0 c , , ,i " i , The men at San Sab have the men s dorm. . , , ,. _., calmed down greatly. Oh, tnere At 1:44 a.m. that Saturday mor- are probably sUU some jokers ning. the fire alarm went off. j over there," said Campbell, "but sending San Sab's 283 male sleep they won't last." Baud, Twirlers Will Go To Guatemala The UM Band of the Hour and i the Hurricanettcs this week be- I gan preparing for the Centra! American Fair in Guatemala, March 10-20. The Guatemalan government, which is sponsoring the band's trip, sent an invitation to UM President Dr. Jay F. W. Pearson. \ During its visit, the band will perform some of the half-time j shows of the past football season, as well as some of the concert works from its upcoming February state concert tour, said Band Director Fred McCall. He said that the band and Hur- ricanettes have also been askr 1 to form a basketball team to com- '' pete with Guatemalan teams Th. point "investigate the complaint and prosecute." The council itself can then try the accused. A 70 per cent vote of the 14 council members (10) would be necessary to remove the defendant from office. Another method of initiating impeachment proceedings is by petition of 40 per cent of the council members. In either case, an impeached officer "may file an appeal with the Board of Review" which passes on all student government actions. The second amendment to the constitution prescribes the general responsibilities of the USG president, vice president and treasurer. It adds the qualification that each of these officers "shall be at least a junior as of the September after election." The proposal also delegates the director of student activities as secretary "without voting power." Are You A Bottle Baby? OK Blood Drive On Tuesday UM students will be asked to give blood Tuesday to build up their own reserve or earmark it ; for another person. Chairman Fred Berney of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternitv ' said that a few girls will be there ' to hold the boys' hands, if neces- j sary. Students can give blood to the . John Elliott Blood Bank Tuesdav ! at 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. in the Student Union. ROTC cadets will have their drive the next day at 3'3n . p.m. in the Armory- Those under 21 must obtain special slips at the Student Union Information Booth or at the APO Bookstore, Temporary Building 94, to be signed by their parents j or guardians. Ain't That Sweet? Lory Rockwell, a senior Hum- canette, yesterday was chosen the sweetheart of the trombone section of the UM band. Miami's top legal expert said yesterday that you CAN tote a concealed bottle of booze into the Orange Bowl for tonight's UM-Air Force football game. But there's a catch—you can't take a sip. Richard Gerstein, state's attorney for Dade County, ventured those opinions in response to a Miami Herald article quoting Florida's At torncy General Richard Er- virj as saying: "Certainly it is illegal for police officers to search spectators at the stadium (Orange Bowl) hy merely stopping them as they enter." A student told the Hurricane that police made him unscrew the top of his binoculars for fear he was con cealing some liquor. This, according to Ervin. "would be unconstitutional." HOWEVER, Police Lt. Richard Meyers, boss of the City of Miami Liquor Squad, *-airl that he knew of no such incident. He said that the police force would search Plltll si fill Grill PLOW INC; Ol'T of the shallow* last h\ the dying sun along driftwood-lined shores is our Hurricane Honey, loan 1 ipson. I he junior is an art major, and this kind of art is our cup of lea. Bugs In Bells 'n5 Buzzers Bog Down Brain Battle someone if he had a "visible container of liquor." "We are there only to protect the rights of all citizens." he remarked. taerstein said the police can legally search some a ana- only if they have a warrant or are making an arrest. In separate interviews, assistant City of Miami attorneys John Lloyd and Ed Fitzpatrick pointed to City Code 42:25 as the only Miam1 ordinance which covers dunking in Uie Orange Bowl. The code, the attorneys said, stalls that it's illegal to drink liquor in the Orange Bowl "before, during or after an event in the stadium." Missing buzzers, bells and University College-sponsored tournament. Assistant History Professor Vaughan Camp, emcee, said that engineering students are still in the process of building the various apparatus. The tournament was to begin last Monday. Now, the opening contest of the future weekly quiz events will be sometime before Christmas, said Camp. The 33 teams which were ready for competition decided Tues.lav on the pairings of teams when the contests do begin. Groups can still sign up in Camp's Ashe Building seconr' floor office. lights postponed the first "Battle of Brains" quiz All Gone Now Monday night's Dade County Auditorium performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony is completely sold out. announced the UM Symphony office yesterday. Tickets are still available for Sunday night's performance at Miami Beach Auditorium, they said. This is the first reading of the famous "Choral" Symphony in the Miami area. See complete story, page 12. |
Archive | MHC_19601202_001.tif |
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