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Renew Loans All students on the National Defense Student Loan program must make renewal applications by Nov. 1 for the second semester. The students are urged to go to the office of Dr. H. Franklin Williams. UM vice president, Ashe 238, to pick up forms. Pkoto ly Paul Grill Stl'DF.NT UNION TV SET GOT IX1TS OF STUDENT VIEWING THIS WEEK UM-Pitt Game, Nixon-Kennedy Debates, World Series Domi ÏQ Prize Men's Residence Housing Association will award a trophy to the men's dorm with the highest scholastic average. The trophy will be awarded in the spring. Ted Cheetham is MRHA j president. Pilot» by Paul Grill THE SCENE ANI> GIKI look almost like a painting. Posed strikingly along Matheson Hammock waterway is senior Sara Lynn Thompson. The Dean's List Hurricane Honey is a sociology major. Yeah! YFKICA IS HKI) HOT Page 7 The Mia Vol. XXXVI, No. 4 University REAL COOL Page 9 urricane Coral Garles, Fla. October 14, I960 825 MORE Rates Up At Girls Dorms The UM Board of Trustees at its last meeting approved a $25 increase in rates for women’s residence halls. The Board also set up a $10 application fee for incoming students. Both rulings will take effect next fall. Presently men and women pay about the same rate for comparable rooms. UM Executive Vice President Dr. Robert Johns said that the dorm increase is necessary to help pay the cost of the extra staff required in the women’s halls. "It costs more to operate the women’s than the men’s dorms because of extra cleaning and counselling," Dr. Johns said. “We surveyed 27 institutions before making the change," he explained. Dr. Johns said that despite the increased rates, UM housing is lower than that at "similar competitive institutions." , With regard to the application fee, he said that the UM "suffers severe loss" from processing applications at no cost. COMMITTEE SET UP Photo by Ed Saari THEY’LL HAVE TO TEAR UP MILLER DRIVE AGAIN IN THREE MONTHS New Pumping Station Is Causing This Road Stopper Dinks Away! Freshmen will continue a UM tradition by throwing their Dinks into the air tonight during the half-time show at the Orange Bowl. One Dink with the letters U-S-G will be thrown up by a "plainclothes" Undergraduate Student Government representative. Students To Help Shape UM Policy Pearson Gets Degree By FREDDIE WIGGINS Students may have a direct hand in helping shape University policy under a committee organized Wednesday by Dr. Robert Johns, UM executive vice president. , | The group, to be called "Student Committee on the State of the University," will be composed of approximately 12 outstanding student leaders. UM President Jay F. W. Pearson was granted an honorary Doctor of Laws Thursday from the University of Kyung Hee in Seoul, Korea. Dr. Pearson is visiting the Korean University at the invitation J J MM JW7 • of University President Young U IfM rr (tllfS United Fund Volunteers Undergraduate Student Government is asking students to volunteer services for the Dade County United Fund Drive. USG is cooperating with Harry Brohen, UF public relations director, and Woody Kempner, vice president in charge of public relations. Freshmen found guilty of violations in student court can work off their fines by helping the drive, Interested students can apply at the USG office in the Student Union. DR. JAY F. W. PEARSON Gets Degree Seek Choue. While there he will consult with the Kyung Hee president on administrative and academic questions. They will meet monthly, along with Dr. Johns, to discuss student and University problems, and to propose solutions. “As long as it doesn’t become a gripe session, it’ll be worthwhile.” i said Dr. Johns, who suggested the plan. Kay Nabors, president of Undergraduate Student Government, is chairman of an ad hoc committee selecting members for the group. Students on the selection committee include: Run Shu-Uirt. Homecoming chairman: Ted Klein, USG treasurer: Ken Cassanova, Phi Mu Alpha president. and Roberta Shaprin. Associated Women Students president. Other members are: Steve Mil- j ler. IFC president: Ted Cheetham. 1 Men's Residence Halls Association president; Bernie Weiner. Hurricane editor, and Jimmy Hahn. Engineering School. It's worth $10 to the person who takes it to the USG office. Dink law will he enforced until the half-time throwaway. Fines last week amounted to $178. CampusTraffic Is Out; Amaro To Be Main St. By BOB DAVIS HarncaM Cm* ta.tor ■ See Map, Page Two The University will become an all-grass campus by the end of February, announced a high-ranking administration official this week.* We Prepare For Disaster Executive Vice President Dr. Robert Johns this week named John J. O'Day, director of UM's physical plant, to head a committee to draw up plans to meet any disaster including fire, flood or hurricane. The committee is to report back to Dr. Johns in January. O’Day said that he expects “to seek advice from outside the University to help us meet any emergency." I The need for a disaster plan j was emphasized earlier this fall when Hurricane Donna hit the J campus and forced temporary protective measures. The changes: ■ Miller Drive will be landscaped from the Student Union to University Drive, resulting in a student mall. ■ San Amaro Drive will be widened. ■ Parking facilities for 255 cars will be constructed. “Fraternity Row, San Amaro Drive, is undergoing construction which will result in a modern two-lane drive with a landscaped center-strip,” said Bernard Klekamp of Little architects. He added that the project will be completed in approximately 90 days. Once finished, the UM source said that Miller Drive traffic will be redirected down San Amaro, and contractors will proceed to tear up Miller Drive from the base of the Student Union building to the intersection of USG Asking Racial Study Undergraduate Student Government this week passed a proposal that could set up an integrated student committee to study interracial problems in Florida. The plan awaits the approval of the State’s Fowler Commission on Race Relations, meeting to- j morrow in Tampa. Dean of Students Noble Hendrix and ITSG Vice President Jerry Levy will present the proposal before the committee. Levy said that USG is spon- j soring the program in the hope that it will “spring into a full-fledged, coordinated organization | of Florida’s colleges and universities." Levy added that such a student University Drive. The area will then be seeded for grass. The entire program will he completed by February, he said. At the points where the drive is halted, landscaped turnarounds will be created. Included in the program, according to Klekamp, are three parking areas accommodating 255 cars. (Continued on Page 2) committee could also attack problems in student government and other areas. Our Queen Must Apply Applications for the UM Homecoming Queen and her court must be turned in by 2 p.m. today, as final plans are being readied for , the top social event of the fall i semester. Judging will take place 4:30 | p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 p.m. 1 Thursday at the Aquinas Center j for the queen and her court. Annual Homecoming Week is Nov i 7-12. The court will he made up of four coeds—representing the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior classes. To compete for queen a coed must be a junior or senior who has been here at least two semesters. Applications must be turned in by 2 p.m. today in room four of the Student Union. Organizations interested in preparing floats for the Homecoming Parade Nov. 10 should contact Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, in the Student Union building. Other events during the week include Homecoming Dance Nov. 11, UM-Notre Dame football game in the Orange Bowl Nov. 12. and an after-the-parade Street Dance Nov 10.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 14, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-10-14 |
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_19601014 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19601014 |
Digital ID | MHC_19601014_001 |
Full Text | Renew Loans All students on the National Defense Student Loan program must make renewal applications by Nov. 1 for the second semester. The students are urged to go to the office of Dr. H. Franklin Williams. UM vice president, Ashe 238, to pick up forms. Pkoto ly Paul Grill Stl'DF.NT UNION TV SET GOT IX1TS OF STUDENT VIEWING THIS WEEK UM-Pitt Game, Nixon-Kennedy Debates, World Series Domi ÏQ Prize Men's Residence Housing Association will award a trophy to the men's dorm with the highest scholastic average. The trophy will be awarded in the spring. Ted Cheetham is MRHA j president. Pilot» by Paul Grill THE SCENE ANI> GIKI look almost like a painting. Posed strikingly along Matheson Hammock waterway is senior Sara Lynn Thompson. The Dean's List Hurricane Honey is a sociology major. Yeah! YFKICA IS HKI) HOT Page 7 The Mia Vol. XXXVI, No. 4 University REAL COOL Page 9 urricane Coral Garles, Fla. October 14, I960 825 MORE Rates Up At Girls Dorms The UM Board of Trustees at its last meeting approved a $25 increase in rates for women’s residence halls. The Board also set up a $10 application fee for incoming students. Both rulings will take effect next fall. Presently men and women pay about the same rate for comparable rooms. UM Executive Vice President Dr. Robert Johns said that the dorm increase is necessary to help pay the cost of the extra staff required in the women’s halls. "It costs more to operate the women’s than the men’s dorms because of extra cleaning and counselling," Dr. Johns said. “We surveyed 27 institutions before making the change," he explained. Dr. Johns said that despite the increased rates, UM housing is lower than that at "similar competitive institutions." , With regard to the application fee, he said that the UM "suffers severe loss" from processing applications at no cost. COMMITTEE SET UP Photo by Ed Saari THEY’LL HAVE TO TEAR UP MILLER DRIVE AGAIN IN THREE MONTHS New Pumping Station Is Causing This Road Stopper Dinks Away! Freshmen will continue a UM tradition by throwing their Dinks into the air tonight during the half-time show at the Orange Bowl. One Dink with the letters U-S-G will be thrown up by a "plainclothes" Undergraduate Student Government representative. Students To Help Shape UM Policy Pearson Gets Degree By FREDDIE WIGGINS Students may have a direct hand in helping shape University policy under a committee organized Wednesday by Dr. Robert Johns, UM executive vice president. , | The group, to be called "Student Committee on the State of the University," will be composed of approximately 12 outstanding student leaders. UM President Jay F. W. Pearson was granted an honorary Doctor of Laws Thursday from the University of Kyung Hee in Seoul, Korea. Dr. Pearson is visiting the Korean University at the invitation J J MM JW7 • of University President Young U IfM rr (tllfS United Fund Volunteers Undergraduate Student Government is asking students to volunteer services for the Dade County United Fund Drive. USG is cooperating with Harry Brohen, UF public relations director, and Woody Kempner, vice president in charge of public relations. Freshmen found guilty of violations in student court can work off their fines by helping the drive, Interested students can apply at the USG office in the Student Union. DR. JAY F. W. PEARSON Gets Degree Seek Choue. While there he will consult with the Kyung Hee president on administrative and academic questions. They will meet monthly, along with Dr. Johns, to discuss student and University problems, and to propose solutions. “As long as it doesn’t become a gripe session, it’ll be worthwhile.” i said Dr. Johns, who suggested the plan. Kay Nabors, president of Undergraduate Student Government, is chairman of an ad hoc committee selecting members for the group. Students on the selection committee include: Run Shu-Uirt. Homecoming chairman: Ted Klein, USG treasurer: Ken Cassanova, Phi Mu Alpha president. and Roberta Shaprin. Associated Women Students president. Other members are: Steve Mil- j ler. IFC president: Ted Cheetham. 1 Men's Residence Halls Association president; Bernie Weiner. Hurricane editor, and Jimmy Hahn. Engineering School. It's worth $10 to the person who takes it to the USG office. Dink law will he enforced until the half-time throwaway. Fines last week amounted to $178. CampusTraffic Is Out; Amaro To Be Main St. By BOB DAVIS HarncaM Cm* ta.tor ■ See Map, Page Two The University will become an all-grass campus by the end of February, announced a high-ranking administration official this week.* We Prepare For Disaster Executive Vice President Dr. Robert Johns this week named John J. O'Day, director of UM's physical plant, to head a committee to draw up plans to meet any disaster including fire, flood or hurricane. The committee is to report back to Dr. Johns in January. O’Day said that he expects “to seek advice from outside the University to help us meet any emergency." I The need for a disaster plan j was emphasized earlier this fall when Hurricane Donna hit the J campus and forced temporary protective measures. The changes: ■ Miller Drive will be landscaped from the Student Union to University Drive, resulting in a student mall. ■ San Amaro Drive will be widened. ■ Parking facilities for 255 cars will be constructed. “Fraternity Row, San Amaro Drive, is undergoing construction which will result in a modern two-lane drive with a landscaped center-strip,” said Bernard Klekamp of Little architects. He added that the project will be completed in approximately 90 days. Once finished, the UM source said that Miller Drive traffic will be redirected down San Amaro, and contractors will proceed to tear up Miller Drive from the base of the Student Union building to the intersection of USG Asking Racial Study Undergraduate Student Government this week passed a proposal that could set up an integrated student committee to study interracial problems in Florida. The plan awaits the approval of the State’s Fowler Commission on Race Relations, meeting to- j morrow in Tampa. Dean of Students Noble Hendrix and ITSG Vice President Jerry Levy will present the proposal before the committee. Levy said that USG is spon- j soring the program in the hope that it will “spring into a full-fledged, coordinated organization | of Florida’s colleges and universities." Levy added that such a student University Drive. The area will then be seeded for grass. The entire program will he completed by February, he said. At the points where the drive is halted, landscaped turnarounds will be created. Included in the program, according to Klekamp, are three parking areas accommodating 255 cars. (Continued on Page 2) committee could also attack problems in student government and other areas. Our Queen Must Apply Applications for the UM Homecoming Queen and her court must be turned in by 2 p.m. today, as final plans are being readied for , the top social event of the fall i semester. Judging will take place 4:30 | p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 p.m. 1 Thursday at the Aquinas Center j for the queen and her court. Annual Homecoming Week is Nov i 7-12. The court will he made up of four coeds—representing the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior classes. To compete for queen a coed must be a junior or senior who has been here at least two semesters. Applications must be turned in by 2 p.m. today in room four of the Student Union. Organizations interested in preparing floats for the Homecoming Parade Nov. 10 should contact Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, in the Student Union building. Other events during the week include Homecoming Dance Nov. 11, UM-Notre Dame football game in the Orange Bowl Nov. 12. and an after-the-parade Street Dance Nov 10. |
Archive | MHC_19601014_001.tif |
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