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THE MIAMI HURR'C Volume XXVIII University ok Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., July 16, 1954 No. 30 Schulke UM Photo 'Super salesmen' are these eager buyer-baiters from the UM marketing department. Students 'Se//' Copter, Tractor Two useful items which no well- appointed campus apartment should be without, a Sikorski helicopter and a multi-ton Caterpillar earth mover, were "sold" to student buyere at an open-air marketing demonstration held before the Student Club on Wednesday. The helicopter and earth mover were among a variety of consumer goods which were up for purchase. Other items included Alsco Aluminum Combination storm windows, Gray Audographs, Sealtest Milk, and Hy-Test Safety Shoes. The "sale" attracted quite • bit of attention from students and passers-by as Captain Charles Cover of National Airlines set his big helicopter down on the narrow grass plot before the Student Club to open the proceedings. The demonstration was really a dry run, a project undertaken by the salesmanship class of UM's marketing department, under the direction of Dr. Victor W. Bennett, departmental chairman. It was designed to give the students practical work in selling a variety of products to prospective, and perhaps resistant, customers. It was very similar to student projects conducted in the past, when such exotic household utensils as race horses were auctioned off. The students designated as salesmen demonstrated their products to the customers (also students) with a persuasive line of patter designed to soften the most varicose of sales resistances. The talks were tape recorded and then played back during a regular class hour so that the students would have a chance to comment upon and criticize the presentations, possibly spot-lighting weak points in the delivery. The sales were successful and much was learned from this class in action. A "prospective buyer' Schulk. UM Photo descends from the helicopter. UM Opens 3-Day Photo-Workshop To High School Seniors And Grads An invitational photo - workshop will be held by the UM's photo center on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, July 26, 27, and 28. The workshop is designed to give practical experience in the techniques of photo-journalism to the seniors and recent graduates of the local high schools. The workshop will begin at 9:30 a.m. Monday, July 26, with a general explanation of the curriculum to follow. The afternoon's activities will include a guided tour of the Main Campus and North Campus. On Wednesday, the photos that have been taken will be developed by the photo center staff. The pictures will then be discussed. Instructors for the workshop will be Flip Schulke, UM photographer, Bob Rudoff, UM photography instructor, and Fraser Hale, photo editor of the 1954 Ibis. The workshop will serve this year also in an experimental capacity. If the results are satisfactory, it will be an annual affair. Registration Cards Available Monday For Second Session Veterans Must Check With VA Office For Clearance And Attendance Cards By RAE DENBURC. A-aii-ani N«w> Editor Registration appointment cards for students who plan to attend the second summer session may be picked up starting Monday, the Registrar's office announced. Registration cards are picked up at the Registrar's office. *- Appointment cards will be avail able for all students who attended the first summer session. Students who did not attend the first session but wish to attend the second should apply for their cards immediately. Students without appointment cards will not be registered until all other students have completed registration. Late registering students will be required to pay a $10 late registration fee. Registration for the five-week sn und session will be on Monday, July 26 for all day students. Classes will begin on Tuesday, July 27 and run through August 28. Evening division students will register in the Evening division office, M105, on July 22, 23 or 26 between 7 and 9 p.m. Graduate students should check with the office of the Dean of the Graduate school as to their registration procedures. The Veteran's Administration office has announced that all World War II veterans studying under Public Law 16 must pick up their clearance slips on Thursday, July 22, in order to register for the second summer session. Korean veterans should turn in their attendance cards to the VA office on Friday or Saturday, July 23 or 24. The attendance cards should be picked up after they take their final examinations. The Korean veterans will also get their clearance slips at that time. The VA office will be open evenings on July 22, 23 and the week of July 26 from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Daytime office hours are from 8 a.m. to S p.m. The office will also be open on Saturday, July 24, during examination hours. Entertainment Slated For Three Conductors The three conductors of the summer "Pops" series will be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. O'Neill for the Symphony club tomorrow afternoon from 4 to 6. The party will be held in the garden of the O'Neill home at 1285 N.E. 101 St., Miami. Guests of honor will be John Bitter, music director and regular conductor of the symphony, Izler Solomon, guest conductor for three concerts, and Modeste Alloo, associate conductor for one of the summer series. Seeking Master's, Korea's Miss Lint Studies At Miami By EVELYN SAVAGE Aauunt Ntwi I-'ditiw Oriental charm is added to the UM campus with the presence of Korean Margaret Lim. Hearing Margaret speak English, one finds it hard to realize that she learned the language only a year ago when she first arrived in America. The soft-spoken Korean girl ia taking accounting and economics at UM while working for her master's degree in business administration. She studied English, marketing and management at Florida State University before coming here. Margaret received her BA. degree in literature at Eewha University, a 70 year-old institute run by Methodist missionaries. As soon as she graduates from UM she plans to return to Korea as secretary to Dr. Helen Kim, president of Eewha University. Margaret came here hy arrangement with Dr. Kim and her guardian while In America, Marion Ramsey. Ramsey, a Ft. Pierce businessman, met Margaret when he was commanding officer of an Army Airways Communicating Service group and was using the Eewha University school building as headquarters. She greatly admires the free atmosphere of our .co-educational university. Korean boys and girls don't have co-ed schools or dates. The popularity of the girl is judged by the number of letters she gets from enamored swains. (Margaret readily admits that school authorities and parents sometimes suppress the mail.) Evidence of "the ultimate" in the mail courtship is a letter written in blood from the suitor's cut finger. Korean boys must have a poetic imagination to woe and win an Oriental charmer. Despite these turbulent mail romances, marriages are arranged by the parents. A deciding factor in the proposed match is the family name and reputation. "Save your face" is an old Korean maxim—it's not nice to fall in love. Rudolf UMPhoto Pressing buttons American style Is Korea's Margaret Llm.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, July 16, 1954 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1954-07-16 |
Coverage Temporal | 1950-1959 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (4 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_19540716 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19540716 |
Digital ID | MHC_19540716_001 |
Full Text | THE MIAMI HURR'C Volume XXVIII University ok Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., July 16, 1954 No. 30 Schulke UM Photo 'Super salesmen' are these eager buyer-baiters from the UM marketing department. Students 'Se//' Copter, Tractor Two useful items which no well- appointed campus apartment should be without, a Sikorski helicopter and a multi-ton Caterpillar earth mover, were "sold" to student buyere at an open-air marketing demonstration held before the Student Club on Wednesday. The helicopter and earth mover were among a variety of consumer goods which were up for purchase. Other items included Alsco Aluminum Combination storm windows, Gray Audographs, Sealtest Milk, and Hy-Test Safety Shoes. The "sale" attracted quite • bit of attention from students and passers-by as Captain Charles Cover of National Airlines set his big helicopter down on the narrow grass plot before the Student Club to open the proceedings. The demonstration was really a dry run, a project undertaken by the salesmanship class of UM's marketing department, under the direction of Dr. Victor W. Bennett, departmental chairman. It was designed to give the students practical work in selling a variety of products to prospective, and perhaps resistant, customers. It was very similar to student projects conducted in the past, when such exotic household utensils as race horses were auctioned off. The students designated as salesmen demonstrated their products to the customers (also students) with a persuasive line of patter designed to soften the most varicose of sales resistances. The talks were tape recorded and then played back during a regular class hour so that the students would have a chance to comment upon and criticize the presentations, possibly spot-lighting weak points in the delivery. The sales were successful and much was learned from this class in action. A "prospective buyer' Schulk. UM Photo descends from the helicopter. UM Opens 3-Day Photo-Workshop To High School Seniors And Grads An invitational photo - workshop will be held by the UM's photo center on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, July 26, 27, and 28. The workshop is designed to give practical experience in the techniques of photo-journalism to the seniors and recent graduates of the local high schools. The workshop will begin at 9:30 a.m. Monday, July 26, with a general explanation of the curriculum to follow. The afternoon's activities will include a guided tour of the Main Campus and North Campus. On Wednesday, the photos that have been taken will be developed by the photo center staff. The pictures will then be discussed. Instructors for the workshop will be Flip Schulke, UM photographer, Bob Rudoff, UM photography instructor, and Fraser Hale, photo editor of the 1954 Ibis. The workshop will serve this year also in an experimental capacity. If the results are satisfactory, it will be an annual affair. Registration Cards Available Monday For Second Session Veterans Must Check With VA Office For Clearance And Attendance Cards By RAE DENBURC. A-aii-ani N«w> Editor Registration appointment cards for students who plan to attend the second summer session may be picked up starting Monday, the Registrar's office announced. Registration cards are picked up at the Registrar's office. *- Appointment cards will be avail able for all students who attended the first summer session. Students who did not attend the first session but wish to attend the second should apply for their cards immediately. Students without appointment cards will not be registered until all other students have completed registration. Late registering students will be required to pay a $10 late registration fee. Registration for the five-week sn und session will be on Monday, July 26 for all day students. Classes will begin on Tuesday, July 27 and run through August 28. Evening division students will register in the Evening division office, M105, on July 22, 23 or 26 between 7 and 9 p.m. Graduate students should check with the office of the Dean of the Graduate school as to their registration procedures. The Veteran's Administration office has announced that all World War II veterans studying under Public Law 16 must pick up their clearance slips on Thursday, July 22, in order to register for the second summer session. Korean veterans should turn in their attendance cards to the VA office on Friday or Saturday, July 23 or 24. The attendance cards should be picked up after they take their final examinations. The Korean veterans will also get their clearance slips at that time. The VA office will be open evenings on July 22, 23 and the week of July 26 from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Daytime office hours are from 8 a.m. to S p.m. The office will also be open on Saturday, July 24, during examination hours. Entertainment Slated For Three Conductors The three conductors of the summer "Pops" series will be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. O'Neill for the Symphony club tomorrow afternoon from 4 to 6. The party will be held in the garden of the O'Neill home at 1285 N.E. 101 St., Miami. Guests of honor will be John Bitter, music director and regular conductor of the symphony, Izler Solomon, guest conductor for three concerts, and Modeste Alloo, associate conductor for one of the summer series. Seeking Master's, Korea's Miss Lint Studies At Miami By EVELYN SAVAGE Aauunt Ntwi I-'ditiw Oriental charm is added to the UM campus with the presence of Korean Margaret Lim. Hearing Margaret speak English, one finds it hard to realize that she learned the language only a year ago when she first arrived in America. The soft-spoken Korean girl ia taking accounting and economics at UM while working for her master's degree in business administration. She studied English, marketing and management at Florida State University before coming here. Margaret received her BA. degree in literature at Eewha University, a 70 year-old institute run by Methodist missionaries. As soon as she graduates from UM she plans to return to Korea as secretary to Dr. Helen Kim, president of Eewha University. Margaret came here hy arrangement with Dr. Kim and her guardian while In America, Marion Ramsey. Ramsey, a Ft. Pierce businessman, met Margaret when he was commanding officer of an Army Airways Communicating Service group and was using the Eewha University school building as headquarters. She greatly admires the free atmosphere of our .co-educational university. Korean boys and girls don't have co-ed schools or dates. The popularity of the girl is judged by the number of letters she gets from enamored swains. (Margaret readily admits that school authorities and parents sometimes suppress the mail.) Evidence of "the ultimate" in the mail courtship is a letter written in blood from the suitor's cut finger. Korean boys must have a poetic imagination to woe and win an Oriental charmer. Despite these turbulent mail romances, marriages are arranged by the parents. A deciding factor in the proposed match is the family name and reputation. "Save your face" is an old Korean maxim—it's not nice to fall in love. Rudolf UMPhoto Pressing buttons American style Is Korea's Margaret Llm. |
Archive | MHC_19540716_001.tif |
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