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The Miami Hurricane Vol. XXXI University or Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., February 24,1956 No. 13 Show Rehearsal Date Set ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Story On Pago 2 ★ ★ ★ Inter-Americana Week Opens On Thursday Story On Pago 3 the Pep Club, on the electric guitar. Cheerleader» adding to the activity are Bobbi Motley, left, and Marvin Randell. Purpose of the jam sessions during intermission of the games is to promote and encourage spirit among students, players and basket-ban fans. PEPPING IT UP at the Miami Beach Auditorium is the Pep Club band, the Cardboard Five. Occasion (or the jam session was the Morehead State-UM basketball game last Monday evening. Beating out the rhythms am Gordon Randell on drums, Paul Zonn on clarinet, and Sonny Block, president of GETTING THE WELCOME treatment at the Inter-fraternity council smoker is rushee Ron Lambert, second from left, as Art Framke, IFC president, watches procedure. Pouring out the welcome is BUI Carter, right, and Wayne Fielding. About 80 students went through the rush line last Friday in the Stu- dent Union patio where the 27 campus fraternities set up tables. Rushees visited active members of each fraternity, inspected trophies and scrapbooks and received literature. Formal rush wiU close Thursday, followed by silence Friday evening until March 8, when bids are picked up. |-------Th« Ingide Story------------------------------ What They Are Saying ... “Here at the University brotherhood has an added meaning,” writes Dominic Koo in a special Brotherhood Week message. He gives an example of “a lasting memory of brotherhood” — “the week before my first law examination I found myself studying with a group of law students of Syrian, Jewish, Italian and Irish ancestry.” Suu story, pago 2. “The committee plans to gradually take over management of the Student Union and tailor it to fit the needs of the individual student,” says Harold McMullen, chairman of the new Student Union committee. Sm story, pag* 2. “A trim little blonde from Alabama” who “will be well-equipped in tactics and maneuvers for this leap year,” is News Editor Evelyn Savage’s story on Mary Lamont, who’s “learning the principles of warfare in an otherwise all-male class.” Sm story, pago 2. “The bells toll for the student publications at the University of Maryland . . . Their spirit, their very freedom, if not crushed at best has been placed in suspended animation . . . A pall of illiberality drops on the scene,” is The Hurricane’s comment on publications situation at Maryland. Sm editorial, page 6. “The use of thermodynamics in baseball completely escapes me,” complains Editor William Olafson. “Does the term “hot corner" refer to a roaring fire somewhere in the park, an area where the temperature is extremely high, a player’s temper or the calorific characteristic of the position involved?” Sm Debris column, page 7. “A diminutive campus free-loader who usually has to settle for crumbs, but doesn’t complain despite the fact he eats like a bird,” is the interview of the week. Staff Writer Susie Mar-bey, unfortunately, found the subject — a bird himself — thought Hurricane interviewers were for the birds. See story, page 9. “It should help solve fraternity pranks and still leave room for expression of fraternity spirit,” said Interfratemity Council adviser Parker F. Enwright about the IFC’s brand-new board of inquiry. Sm story, page 10. Rudolf UM Umo * NETTING HER MAN for leap year is 17-year-old Nancy Starks tein. Hurricane Honey No. 13. The trapping equipment obviously helped the upper froth psychology major to catch her victim, but the position of the gun indicates her catch was probably a mistake. If the five-feet, four-inch brunette will leave her hunting gear in the dorms, and ankle up to The Hurricane office at 3:30 today, leap year or not, Fred Porter, assistant news editor, will present her with an orchid.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, February 24, 1956 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1956-02-24 |
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_19560224 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19560224 |
Digital ID | MHC_19560224_001 |
Full Text | The Miami Hurricane Vol. XXXI University or Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., February 24,1956 No. 13 Show Rehearsal Date Set ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Story On Pago 2 ★ ★ ★ Inter-Americana Week Opens On Thursday Story On Pago 3 the Pep Club, on the electric guitar. Cheerleader» adding to the activity are Bobbi Motley, left, and Marvin Randell. Purpose of the jam sessions during intermission of the games is to promote and encourage spirit among students, players and basket-ban fans. PEPPING IT UP at the Miami Beach Auditorium is the Pep Club band, the Cardboard Five. Occasion (or the jam session was the Morehead State-UM basketball game last Monday evening. Beating out the rhythms am Gordon Randell on drums, Paul Zonn on clarinet, and Sonny Block, president of GETTING THE WELCOME treatment at the Inter-fraternity council smoker is rushee Ron Lambert, second from left, as Art Framke, IFC president, watches procedure. Pouring out the welcome is BUI Carter, right, and Wayne Fielding. About 80 students went through the rush line last Friday in the Stu- dent Union patio where the 27 campus fraternities set up tables. Rushees visited active members of each fraternity, inspected trophies and scrapbooks and received literature. Formal rush wiU close Thursday, followed by silence Friday evening until March 8, when bids are picked up. |-------Th« Ingide Story------------------------------ What They Are Saying ... “Here at the University brotherhood has an added meaning,” writes Dominic Koo in a special Brotherhood Week message. He gives an example of “a lasting memory of brotherhood” — “the week before my first law examination I found myself studying with a group of law students of Syrian, Jewish, Italian and Irish ancestry.” Suu story, pago 2. “The committee plans to gradually take over management of the Student Union and tailor it to fit the needs of the individual student,” says Harold McMullen, chairman of the new Student Union committee. Sm story, pag* 2. “A trim little blonde from Alabama” who “will be well-equipped in tactics and maneuvers for this leap year,” is News Editor Evelyn Savage’s story on Mary Lamont, who’s “learning the principles of warfare in an otherwise all-male class.” Sm story, pago 2. “The bells toll for the student publications at the University of Maryland . . . Their spirit, their very freedom, if not crushed at best has been placed in suspended animation . . . A pall of illiberality drops on the scene,” is The Hurricane’s comment on publications situation at Maryland. Sm editorial, page 6. “The use of thermodynamics in baseball completely escapes me,” complains Editor William Olafson. “Does the term “hot corner" refer to a roaring fire somewhere in the park, an area where the temperature is extremely high, a player’s temper or the calorific characteristic of the position involved?” Sm Debris column, page 7. “A diminutive campus free-loader who usually has to settle for crumbs, but doesn’t complain despite the fact he eats like a bird,” is the interview of the week. Staff Writer Susie Mar-bey, unfortunately, found the subject — a bird himself — thought Hurricane interviewers were for the birds. See story, page 9. “It should help solve fraternity pranks and still leave room for expression of fraternity spirit,” said Interfratemity Council adviser Parker F. Enwright about the IFC’s brand-new board of inquiry. Sm story, page 10. Rudolf UM Umo * NETTING HER MAN for leap year is 17-year-old Nancy Starks tein. Hurricane Honey No. 13. The trapping equipment obviously helped the upper froth psychology major to catch her victim, but the position of the gun indicates her catch was probably a mistake. If the five-feet, four-inch brunette will leave her hunting gear in the dorms, and ankle up to The Hurricane office at 3:30 today, leap year or not, Fred Porter, assistant news editor, will present her with an orchid. |
Archive | MHC_19560224_001.tif |
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