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The Miami Hurricane Vol. XXXII University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 12, 1956 No. 3 Culture Series Coming Up Story On Pago 2 Baseball Fans Turn Serie-ous Sally Bamataln. Dodgers ... nail-chewing no help Barry Jaffa, Dodgers ... losing money Leo La France. Yankees ... got it easy Bill Tarlo, Dodgers ... best Series I've seen DEEP CONCENTRATION and mixed emotions feature crowd watching seventh game of World Series on lower lounge TV set. The crowd, which throughout the week ran as high as 200 fans, was split between Yank and Dodger fans and just plain baseball addicts. A fairly common breed was the hater Photo by Bell of all New York area clubs, and his antagonistic impartiality held constant with only one break— Yankee pitcher Larsen’s perfect no-hitter, the only one in Series history. Everybody — well, almost everybody—rooted for Larsen. (See story, page 2.) The ln»ide Story What They Are Saying... “No Tea, But Sympathy," and a couple of suggestions are offered in a special Hurricane editorial on page 2. It concerns student government and the football seating issue. “I still have the same boy friend, the same friends at school, and the same aims in life,” says Sally Fisher. Miss Florida, after a hectic summer competing in the Miss America Contest. The story appears on page 9. “The absolutely fantastic lack of regard for human decency and dignity” in the dismissal of a Florida county health officer, is the subject of an editorial appearing on page 6. “There has long been a need for some sort of free entertainment on weekends in the Student Union,” says Tom Spencer, SBG president, in a page 9 story. “I don’t think that being courteous is too far beyond anyone’s abilities, especially those of a university student,” says Joyce S. Penziner in a letter to the editor on page 6. “Red tape should be thrown out the window when the question of human lives enters the picture.” This is what an editorial on page 6 says. “The theater is not only a fascinating way of making a living, but it continually challenges,” says Dr. Delmar E. Solem, Drama Department chairman and Ring Theater director, quoted on page 12. “How the South Won the War,” is the subject of a photo lecture given by Ed Pierce, chief photographer of the Miami Daily News. Story appears on page 5. “Senior class organization would help seniors identify themselves with UM . . . and more alumni interest would be formulated during homecoming,” says Bryce Dunham, associate Arts and Sciences dean. He’s quoted in a page 3 story. “The most popular Evening Division classes consist of noncredit general education courses offered for the intellectual pleasure of the students,” says Dr. Dan Steinhoff Jr., Evening Division dean, quoted in a page 7 feature. “Some professors judge a student by his test grades while others take a letter off the final grade for each absence,” says Dean of Students Noble Hendrix. A story on memos he has released on excessive absences is on page 3. IN THIS CORNER is Sondra Welch, bantamweight Hurricane Honey number three. Five feet tall, weighing in at 98 pounds, Sondra is a home economics major from Coral Gables, Fla. A Kappa Kappa Gamma member, her hobbies are sewing and swimming. If Sondra will be at the 50-yard-line at halftime of tonight's game, Bob Bell, Hurricane acting photo editor, will pin her with an orchid.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 12, 1956 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1956-10-12 |
Coverage Temporal | 1950-1959 |
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_19561012 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19561012 |
Digital ID | MHC_19561012_001 |
Full Text | The Miami Hurricane Vol. XXXII University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 12, 1956 No. 3 Culture Series Coming Up Story On Pago 2 Baseball Fans Turn Serie-ous Sally Bamataln. Dodgers ... nail-chewing no help Barry Jaffa, Dodgers ... losing money Leo La France. Yankees ... got it easy Bill Tarlo, Dodgers ... best Series I've seen DEEP CONCENTRATION and mixed emotions feature crowd watching seventh game of World Series on lower lounge TV set. The crowd, which throughout the week ran as high as 200 fans, was split between Yank and Dodger fans and just plain baseball addicts. A fairly common breed was the hater Photo by Bell of all New York area clubs, and his antagonistic impartiality held constant with only one break— Yankee pitcher Larsen’s perfect no-hitter, the only one in Series history. Everybody — well, almost everybody—rooted for Larsen. (See story, page 2.) The ln»ide Story What They Are Saying... “No Tea, But Sympathy," and a couple of suggestions are offered in a special Hurricane editorial on page 2. It concerns student government and the football seating issue. “I still have the same boy friend, the same friends at school, and the same aims in life,” says Sally Fisher. Miss Florida, after a hectic summer competing in the Miss America Contest. The story appears on page 9. “The absolutely fantastic lack of regard for human decency and dignity” in the dismissal of a Florida county health officer, is the subject of an editorial appearing on page 6. “There has long been a need for some sort of free entertainment on weekends in the Student Union,” says Tom Spencer, SBG president, in a page 9 story. “I don’t think that being courteous is too far beyond anyone’s abilities, especially those of a university student,” says Joyce S. Penziner in a letter to the editor on page 6. “Red tape should be thrown out the window when the question of human lives enters the picture.” This is what an editorial on page 6 says. “The theater is not only a fascinating way of making a living, but it continually challenges,” says Dr. Delmar E. Solem, Drama Department chairman and Ring Theater director, quoted on page 12. “How the South Won the War,” is the subject of a photo lecture given by Ed Pierce, chief photographer of the Miami Daily News. Story appears on page 5. “Senior class organization would help seniors identify themselves with UM . . . and more alumni interest would be formulated during homecoming,” says Bryce Dunham, associate Arts and Sciences dean. He’s quoted in a page 3 story. “The most popular Evening Division classes consist of noncredit general education courses offered for the intellectual pleasure of the students,” says Dr. Dan Steinhoff Jr., Evening Division dean, quoted in a page 7 feature. “Some professors judge a student by his test grades while others take a letter off the final grade for each absence,” says Dean of Students Noble Hendrix. A story on memos he has released on excessive absences is on page 3. IN THIS CORNER is Sondra Welch, bantamweight Hurricane Honey number three. Five feet tall, weighing in at 98 pounds, Sondra is a home economics major from Coral Gables, Fla. A Kappa Kappa Gamma member, her hobbies are sewing and swimming. If Sondra will be at the 50-yard-line at halftime of tonight's game, Bob Bell, Hurricane acting photo editor, will pin her with an orchid. |
Archive | MHC_19561012_001.tif |
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