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BUDDHISTS IJKE U. S. Page 5 The Mia Vol. XXXV, No. 16 University of Miami urricane Coral Gables, Fla. February 26, 1960 RKVIEWER LIKES MAC Page 10 School Governments Face UA Axe Medical School Gets Thursday Dedication AM A Editor To Kick Off Ceremonies Research and inter-relationships will be the topic of medical interest Thursday when the new Research Building of the School of Medicine is dedicated Relationships of the medical profession to a med school will also be discussed by I>r. John II. Talbott, editor of the journal of the American Medical Association. Under construction since May, 1958. the new building is now about 70 per cent occupied. Research projects totaling about $2 million, representing every phase of medicine, have been moved into the building within the last two months. It is located at 1600 NW 10th Avenue. Up to now research programs have been housed in buildings all over Dade The new building holds 90,000 square feet of lab space and modern apparatus. Dedication ceremonies will be conducted under a gala tent adjacent to the new Research Building. Afterward, there will he a luncheon in the building, followed by guided tours to see the new facilities. It will be open for inspection to faculty members on Wednesday *. .:W- Irritation: Active And Passive Ptau *| Ifiu KELLY COLEMAN THROWS IN TOWEL Wesleyan Star’s Protest • «¡anm ,.«*■! i— u'luRum■•■'mm m •**» .«is. BI T COED USES HER HEAD Parking Lot Squelch •eawn. vsw w. j : Etat« »> Nepal* DR. JOHN TALBOTT He’ll Talk First afternoon and to the general public Saturday and Sunday afternoons, from 1-5 pm Speaker Talbott, formerly a professor of medicine at the University of Buffalo, has been editor of the AMA Journal since October. In his talk, he will highlight the responsibilities of the medical profession and the need for expansion of medical education. Symphony Dedicates To Volpe In commemoration of the death 20 years ago of Arnold Volpe, first UM Symphony conductor, present conductor Fabien Sevitz-ky has dedicated the season's sixth pair of concerts to its founder Volpe's "Fugue in D Minor” will be played by the Orchestra on Sunday and Monday nights. "Fugue in D Minor” is one of 11 written as a student by Volpe, who has been cited a “tireless organizer who worked passionately for the highest artistic aims." In addition to the work, orchestrated by musician Arcady Dubensky, another American work is to lie heard on the program Joan Field, violinist, will premiere Mana - Zucca’s Violin "Chimes" Concerto Shostakovich’s “Symphony No. 5" will be the major orchestral work. IT’S THE SPIRIT Frost Discloses ‘Misgiving ■ See interview, page 2. By RICHARD S. BENNETT A standing ovation ushered Robert Frost into 720 Dorm’s Great Lounge for his lecture, "The Great Misgiving." Speaking to a thoroughly packed hall, Frost said that the “great misgiving" was not exclusively his. “It is a part of any endeavor which lacks spirit." EACH POEM has two parts, said Frost—form and spirit. "It is like religion is the spirit, while the form is the church; like love is the spirit, while marriage is the form. “The great misgiving is that many poems, like people, have only the form." It is this same lack of spirit, said the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, that keeps most graduate school theses "on the dusty shelf, never to be read. Their spirit just doesn't 'come through'.” This “coming through" is Etchings Anyone? Lights, Action -Shakespeare! Angus L Bowmer, founder and producing director of the Oregon Shakespearean Festival in Ashland, will be on campus today and tomorrow interviewing prospective actors and technicians. The Oregon event—oldest of its kind in the Western Hemisphere —stages a six - week repertory season of Shakespearean drams each summer. Bowmer will be visiting 33 universities and a number of community theatres between now and mid-March. In spring, a young man's fancy turns to . . . Well, you know the rest. Or if you don't now, you will after May awakening You see, for the first time in the history of UM, a women’s hall—it's 720 dorm—will swing open their doors. To men. In May. It seems the girls of the dorm left their stoicism in history books and voted to let men trot up on the floors one day this Spring And Dean of Women May A. Brunson said OK. So, tentatively set for the first Sunday in May, the dorm will be open to faculty—and, oh yes, visitors. And the girls are forming committees to hostess the visitors through the rooms Oh. By the way. There will be a sign-in and sign-out sheet on each floor with a hostess to lead the way. ft will be patrolled. POET ROBERT FRONT Speaks Well Too Ernst's greatest concern. “I always wonder whether the spirit in m> poems will rome through to my readers. Sometimes I look hark on poems I've written many years before and wonder about it.” Frost, a white-haired but young-sounding 85-vear-old man of letters, recited several of his poems—interspersing pithy witticisms between the stanzas. ■ "If the Russians win the Olympics in Squaw Valley, 1 might just become a Marxist! I’m Like... Bring Your Bongos Like there'll be a "Beatnik party" next Friday night in the I Student Union patio. Like Undergraduate Association is sponsoring a cool gig for those who dig Zen and those who don't. It's like with no charge, daddy. Everyone's welcome to the blast—bongos or not. Dress is like informal, casual, heat. etc. Swingin' sounds will be provided by Barry JafTe and his far-out band. Joe Enriquez and Keith Win-! traub are the two cats in charge. Like, like? getting tired of their winning all the time.” ■ “I was listening to some leading atomic scientists in New York recently discussing the fate of the world. ‘What have we created?' they moaned. But they shouldn't worry—some common Congressman in Washington will make sure they won't get to do anything." ■ “Newspapermen are always asking me how I'm going to vote for President in 1960 If they really want to know, 1 tell them to read my complete works.” ■ "What do you go to the North Pole for? To see if you can come hack. And why do you write a poem? To see if you can get out of it once you've started, of course.” B “I go through a tremendous number of books a year. I set them on my shelf, read their spines and try to figure out what the book is all about. At the end of the year, I open the book, read the last chapter and see if I was right. It’s amazing how many I can go through like this." IN RECITING his poems. Frost often had difficulty in remembering the titles “Sometimes I forget the m,” he explained, “and sometimes I just change them— but that's ALL I change." Last speaker in the Delta Theta Mu-Undergraduate Association lecture series will be Dr. Arthur j Bestor next month. On The Ball Quote of the Week—from WQAM newscast. 10:55 Monday night: “At the Miami Beach Exhibition Hall tonight the University of Miami beat Kentucky Wesleyan, 104-95. Dick Hickox had 31 points and Ron Godfrey had 25. Miami plays its last game of the season Saturday against Florida State before going into the NAACP tournament.” "Have Not Done Their Job -Blo By BERNIE WEINER Hnieni Mau('*l Edit« Undergraduate Association's largest constitutional revision — including the virtual elimination of school governments—was proposed this week by the UA Council. The move, two years in the making, was spurred by the establishment of the new University College, wnich will "house” all incoming 'students in their freshman and sophomore years ITNAL VOTE on the proposed constitutional amendments will be taken by the UA Council the Tuesday after next, March 9. "This will give the five organizations and five school governments on the Council time to decide which way to vote on the issues," said UA Chairman Jim Blosser Passed Tuesday night by a three-fourths vote of the UA Council, the controversial school government amendment means this, according to Chairman Bios-jser: That schools may continue their t governmental operation if they so wish, but they will no longer receive funds from UA. “This is necessary,” explained Blosser, “because the school governments haven't fulfilled their roles as we had hoped when we set up the original I’A constitution. "Some schools, such as Business Administration, have more than $2,000 in their treasury ;yid don't know what to do with it Others, like the Engineering School, need more than what we were authorized to give them." THE PROPOSED new student government, to he called “Undergraduate Student Government (USG)," would work the following way: ■ Those organizations now having representatives on the Council would remain. These are Men's Residence Halls Association, Student Religious Association, Associated Women Students. Interfratemity Council and Pan-hellenic Council. ■ Representatives will be elected from the five existing schools—Education, Business Administration, College of Arts and Science, Music and Engineering. ■ The freshman and sophomore classes of the new University College will elect class officers The president of each class will serve on the USG Council With the virtual elimination of school governments, individual school honor councils will also disappear. They will be replaced, if the amendments pass, by a central Honor Council, with the USG president serving as its chairman. If the amendments receive the Council's approval March 9, the proposals will then be presented to the University Board of Review, which oversees all UA decisions.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, February 26, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-02-26 |
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_19600226 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19600226 |
Digital ID | MHC_19600226_001 |
Full Text | BUDDHISTS IJKE U. S. Page 5 The Mia Vol. XXXV, No. 16 University of Miami urricane Coral Gables, Fla. February 26, 1960 RKVIEWER LIKES MAC Page 10 School Governments Face UA Axe Medical School Gets Thursday Dedication AM A Editor To Kick Off Ceremonies Research and inter-relationships will be the topic of medical interest Thursday when the new Research Building of the School of Medicine is dedicated Relationships of the medical profession to a med school will also be discussed by I>r. John II. Talbott, editor of the journal of the American Medical Association. Under construction since May, 1958. the new building is now about 70 per cent occupied. Research projects totaling about $2 million, representing every phase of medicine, have been moved into the building within the last two months. It is located at 1600 NW 10th Avenue. Up to now research programs have been housed in buildings all over Dade The new building holds 90,000 square feet of lab space and modern apparatus. Dedication ceremonies will be conducted under a gala tent adjacent to the new Research Building. Afterward, there will he a luncheon in the building, followed by guided tours to see the new facilities. It will be open for inspection to faculty members on Wednesday *. .:W- Irritation: Active And Passive Ptau *| Ifiu KELLY COLEMAN THROWS IN TOWEL Wesleyan Star’s Protest • «¡anm ,.«*■! i— u'luRum■•■'mm m •**» .«is. BI T COED USES HER HEAD Parking Lot Squelch •eawn. vsw w. j : Etat« »> Nepal* DR. JOHN TALBOTT He’ll Talk First afternoon and to the general public Saturday and Sunday afternoons, from 1-5 pm Speaker Talbott, formerly a professor of medicine at the University of Buffalo, has been editor of the AMA Journal since October. In his talk, he will highlight the responsibilities of the medical profession and the need for expansion of medical education. Symphony Dedicates To Volpe In commemoration of the death 20 years ago of Arnold Volpe, first UM Symphony conductor, present conductor Fabien Sevitz-ky has dedicated the season's sixth pair of concerts to its founder Volpe's "Fugue in D Minor” will be played by the Orchestra on Sunday and Monday nights. "Fugue in D Minor” is one of 11 written as a student by Volpe, who has been cited a “tireless organizer who worked passionately for the highest artistic aims." In addition to the work, orchestrated by musician Arcady Dubensky, another American work is to lie heard on the program Joan Field, violinist, will premiere Mana - Zucca’s Violin "Chimes" Concerto Shostakovich’s “Symphony No. 5" will be the major orchestral work. IT’S THE SPIRIT Frost Discloses ‘Misgiving ■ See interview, page 2. By RICHARD S. BENNETT A standing ovation ushered Robert Frost into 720 Dorm’s Great Lounge for his lecture, "The Great Misgiving." Speaking to a thoroughly packed hall, Frost said that the “great misgiving" was not exclusively his. “It is a part of any endeavor which lacks spirit." EACH POEM has two parts, said Frost—form and spirit. "It is like religion is the spirit, while the form is the church; like love is the spirit, while marriage is the form. “The great misgiving is that many poems, like people, have only the form." It is this same lack of spirit, said the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, that keeps most graduate school theses "on the dusty shelf, never to be read. Their spirit just doesn't 'come through'.” This “coming through" is Etchings Anyone? Lights, Action -Shakespeare! Angus L Bowmer, founder and producing director of the Oregon Shakespearean Festival in Ashland, will be on campus today and tomorrow interviewing prospective actors and technicians. The Oregon event—oldest of its kind in the Western Hemisphere —stages a six - week repertory season of Shakespearean drams each summer. Bowmer will be visiting 33 universities and a number of community theatres between now and mid-March. In spring, a young man's fancy turns to . . . Well, you know the rest. Or if you don't now, you will after May awakening You see, for the first time in the history of UM, a women’s hall—it's 720 dorm—will swing open their doors. To men. In May. It seems the girls of the dorm left their stoicism in history books and voted to let men trot up on the floors one day this Spring And Dean of Women May A. Brunson said OK. So, tentatively set for the first Sunday in May, the dorm will be open to faculty—and, oh yes, visitors. And the girls are forming committees to hostess the visitors through the rooms Oh. By the way. There will be a sign-in and sign-out sheet on each floor with a hostess to lead the way. ft will be patrolled. POET ROBERT FRONT Speaks Well Too Ernst's greatest concern. “I always wonder whether the spirit in m> poems will rome through to my readers. Sometimes I look hark on poems I've written many years before and wonder about it.” Frost, a white-haired but young-sounding 85-vear-old man of letters, recited several of his poems—interspersing pithy witticisms between the stanzas. ■ "If the Russians win the Olympics in Squaw Valley, 1 might just become a Marxist! I’m Like... Bring Your Bongos Like there'll be a "Beatnik party" next Friday night in the I Student Union patio. Like Undergraduate Association is sponsoring a cool gig for those who dig Zen and those who don't. It's like with no charge, daddy. Everyone's welcome to the blast—bongos or not. Dress is like informal, casual, heat. etc. Swingin' sounds will be provided by Barry JafTe and his far-out band. Joe Enriquez and Keith Win-! traub are the two cats in charge. Like, like? getting tired of their winning all the time.” ■ “I was listening to some leading atomic scientists in New York recently discussing the fate of the world. ‘What have we created?' they moaned. But they shouldn't worry—some common Congressman in Washington will make sure they won't get to do anything." ■ “Newspapermen are always asking me how I'm going to vote for President in 1960 If they really want to know, 1 tell them to read my complete works.” ■ "What do you go to the North Pole for? To see if you can come hack. And why do you write a poem? To see if you can get out of it once you've started, of course.” B “I go through a tremendous number of books a year. I set them on my shelf, read their spines and try to figure out what the book is all about. At the end of the year, I open the book, read the last chapter and see if I was right. It’s amazing how many I can go through like this." IN RECITING his poems. Frost often had difficulty in remembering the titles “Sometimes I forget the m,” he explained, “and sometimes I just change them— but that's ALL I change." Last speaker in the Delta Theta Mu-Undergraduate Association lecture series will be Dr. Arthur j Bestor next month. On The Ball Quote of the Week—from WQAM newscast. 10:55 Monday night: “At the Miami Beach Exhibition Hall tonight the University of Miami beat Kentucky Wesleyan, 104-95. Dick Hickox had 31 points and Ron Godfrey had 25. Miami plays its last game of the season Saturday against Florida State before going into the NAACP tournament.” "Have Not Done Their Job -Blo By BERNIE WEINER Hnieni Mau('*l Edit« Undergraduate Association's largest constitutional revision — including the virtual elimination of school governments—was proposed this week by the UA Council. The move, two years in the making, was spurred by the establishment of the new University College, wnich will "house” all incoming 'students in their freshman and sophomore years ITNAL VOTE on the proposed constitutional amendments will be taken by the UA Council the Tuesday after next, March 9. "This will give the five organizations and five school governments on the Council time to decide which way to vote on the issues," said UA Chairman Jim Blosser Passed Tuesday night by a three-fourths vote of the UA Council, the controversial school government amendment means this, according to Chairman Bios-jser: That schools may continue their t governmental operation if they so wish, but they will no longer receive funds from UA. “This is necessary,” explained Blosser, “because the school governments haven't fulfilled their roles as we had hoped when we set up the original I’A constitution. "Some schools, such as Business Administration, have more than $2,000 in their treasury ;yid don't know what to do with it Others, like the Engineering School, need more than what we were authorized to give them." THE PROPOSED new student government, to he called “Undergraduate Student Government (USG)," would work the following way: ■ Those organizations now having representatives on the Council would remain. These are Men's Residence Halls Association, Student Religious Association, Associated Women Students. Interfratemity Council and Pan-hellenic Council. ■ Representatives will be elected from the five existing schools—Education, Business Administration, College of Arts and Science, Music and Engineering. ■ The freshman and sophomore classes of the new University College will elect class officers The president of each class will serve on the USG Council With the virtual elimination of school governments, individual school honor councils will also disappear. They will be replaced, if the amendments pass, by a central Honor Council, with the USG president serving as its chairman. If the amendments receive the Council's approval March 9, the proposals will then be presented to the University Board of Review, which oversees all UA decisions. |
Archive | MHC_19600226_001.tif |
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