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UNIVERSITY Of Ml HC Game Hazards: Cars And Cops - - And Irish! ± J LIBRARY ' Students attending the UM-Notre Dame Homecoming Game tomorrow night are on their own—as far as transportation goes, that is. And that brings up a good question: just how far will transportation be going? There will be an estimated 70,000 people converging on the Orange Bowl for the 8:15 tilt. Localités, who remember the traffic and mass confusion in and around the bowl last time UM played Notre Dame, urge those going to leave way early and plan to arrive at that after-game party way late. As the Hurricane went to press, Men’s Residence Halls Association, which usually sponsors student buses to the bowl, called off their bus runs. “Not financially supporting,” said MRHA officials. THAT LEAVES public buses (if they’re running) and private transportation as the only way there. Best bet is probably both. Take a load of students, park the car quite a distance from the Orange Bowl, and take a bus (or walk) — you’ll get in and out much faster. * * * UM officials have received notice from the Miami Police Department concerning shenanigans and booze at the stadium. The City of Miami is doubling its regular police patrol and will haul all offenders to the city jail, they said. There is a Miami city law prohibiting alcoholic beverages on the Orange Bowl grounds. * * * There will be an Undergraduate Student Govern- ment Dance—with a live band—alter the game in the — Student Union. Cost will be 75 cents stag, $1 drag. * * • USG PRESIDENT Kay Nabors urged students to wear white if at all possible. “We’ll have 65,000 people watching us,” she said, “and it would be nice to leave them with a good impression.” * * * Iron Arrow members will form a human corridor for the Hurricanes to run through on the way to the field. Following the game, if UM wins, fans are expected to follow suit—or at least to mob the field, or somebody. CONCERT IS HERE Page 9 The Mia Voi.. XXXVI, No. 8 University of Miami urricane Coral Carles, Fla. November 11,1960 PAINTING IS WHERE? Page 8 Did TV Debates Reveal The Men? ANOTHER? The following analysis of the TV Debates and the questions they raise is reprinted with the permission of its author. Editor Norman Cousins, and the Saturday Review, where it appeared Nov. 5, I960. Mr. Cousins will lecture at the University sometime during February. By NORMAN COUSINS Editor, Saturday Review One mark of an educated man is his ability to live comfortably and intelligently with the fact that he can’t possibly know everything. He feels no shame about the fact that he may be as uninformed about a given subject as an uneducated man, for he has substantial access to an answer if he really needs it. The disadvantage of the uneducated man is that he may be thrown off the scent too easily; he may lose himself in unfamiliar terrain where he may grab at the first intelligible answer and not necessarily the most competent one. T1IE ADVANTAGE of the edu. eated man is that his equipment includes a compass; he knows what a blind alley looks like; he doesn't clutter himself with facts beyond his needs; he knows the difference between near-authority and real authority. The trouble with the Nixon-Kennedy television debates is that they run counter to the educational process. They require that a man keep his mouth moving whether he has something to say or not. It is made to appear that the worst thing that could happen to a candidate is to be | caught without an instant answer I to a complex question. Thoughtful silence is made to appear a confession of ignorance. Hanging over the debates. apparently, is a giant neon sign; Keep Talking Until Your Time Expires. Why should it be considered a liability for a Presidential candi-[ date to admit he doesn't know? Far more impressive, in fact, than an instant display by a candidate | of his statistical knowledge of a problem would be a clear statement of how he would go about Parking Plan Turned Down ■ USG Forum Report, Page 2 Undergraduate Student Government this week turned down the proposal to regulate all on-campus and dormitory parking. ___________ EDITOR NORMAN COUSINS He Wants To Know developing the responsible means j of finding a responsible answer. [ Where would he turn for his source material? Who are the people he would consult? What is the basic philosophy that might underline his quest? The American people are not electing an Answer Man to the Presidency: if this is what they have in mind they should examine the rosters of the discarded (Continued on Page 2) Photo by Pool trill MIAMI'S COOI. WEATHER netted the Hurricane its first sweater-clad Honey of the semester. The lovely elementary education major, Beverly Schwatt, is a sophomore. Anyone for a snowball fight? A Few Tickets Left For Tonight s Dance By JACK GUARMERI A limited number of $5-per-couple tickets will be sold at the door of the Miami Beach Exhibition Hall at tonight’s 34th annual Homecoming Dance. Homecoming Committee reported one of the largest advance sales ever for the 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. event, which will feature the Ray Coniff Orchestra and Chorus. Tickets numbered from 588-633, which disappeared from the Ashe Building this week, will not he honored at the door, said the committee. Also not "honored” at the door will be alcoholic beverages and students in a state of intoxication. reported the Committee on Social Standards. Students found with liquor on — or too much in — their person will be ejected from the dance and are subject to review by the Social Standards Committee. Due to a contractual agreement with Ray Coniff, taping of the music and show is prohibited. Also, only still photographs may he taken — no movies. Group and couple pictures will be taken by Kappa Alpha Mu, UM photography honor society. Alumni will be admitted after 11 p.m. for $2 per ticket. They will receive neither a reservation nor a favor — this year a medallion charm struck in honor of UltTs 34th Homecoming. The council defeated the plan, I 7-3, after tabling it for the past three weeks. USG representative Max Sudakow, originator of the proposal, said that he w ill submit another similar plan within two weeks. Before the proposal was voted ¡down, he had suggested two I amendments. One change would have hiked the auto registration fee. The ! other would have called on the UM administration to furnish the j “police" necessary in maintaining the plan. Sudakow told the council that hy 1962. the administration will be charging the auto registration anyway. However, he pointed out. the University will not ha.ve to use the money for improving parking lots. Jeff Randall, University College freshman representative, criticized the proposed apportionment of funds. He questioned the provision that would give USG I one-sixth of the money. He suggested that all funds from the plan go toward improving present parking facilities. flitn by lilt Tnit ODK PRESIDENT BYRON SCOTT RANG IN UM’S 34TH ANNUAL HOMECOMING MONDAY Big Dance Tonight, Big Game Tomorrow—And It's Then All Over Classes Out UM classes after 10:50 this morning will be cancelled because of Homecoming activities, announced Dr. Robert Johns, executive vice-president. A final Homecoming pep-rally will be held at 11 this morning at the Student Union. Tempo Out Monday The largest collection of fiction works since the defunct UM literary magazine ‘Folio’ will be contained in the second issue of Tempo out Monday. “We have a play, poems and four short stories of both serious and whimsical varieties,” remarked Editor Byron Scott. He said that perhaps Tempo is now beginning to fill the “so-called void” created by the absence of Folio. The 36-page issue will also contain feature research articles and picture stories, including one giving pictorial proof of underwater classes at UM. “The magazine is cheap at half the price,” Scott said. “Which is probably what we should be selling it for.” mtmm ./ Blood Needwl Homer Ford is dying. The former Hurricane radio-TV editor has a severe liver disease. He has had 11 blood transfusions at Jackson Memorial Hospital. He will need more to live. Aside from his work on the Hurricane, he has written many outstanding TV and radio scripts—including “Westward, Ha!” He is also director of the UM-TV news staff and is currently interning at WTVJ. Reverend and Mrs. Ford give their deepest thanks to the students who have already contributed blood for their son. Arrangements for blood donations can be made by contacting Jackson Hospital. BRAVES,’ SHADOWS MARCH See Tappees, Page 7
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 11, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-11-11 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (12 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_19601111 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19601111 |
Digital ID | MHC_19601111_001 |
Full Text | UNIVERSITY Of Ml HC Game Hazards: Cars And Cops - - And Irish! ± J LIBRARY ' Students attending the UM-Notre Dame Homecoming Game tomorrow night are on their own—as far as transportation goes, that is. And that brings up a good question: just how far will transportation be going? There will be an estimated 70,000 people converging on the Orange Bowl for the 8:15 tilt. Localités, who remember the traffic and mass confusion in and around the bowl last time UM played Notre Dame, urge those going to leave way early and plan to arrive at that after-game party way late. As the Hurricane went to press, Men’s Residence Halls Association, which usually sponsors student buses to the bowl, called off their bus runs. “Not financially supporting,” said MRHA officials. THAT LEAVES public buses (if they’re running) and private transportation as the only way there. Best bet is probably both. Take a load of students, park the car quite a distance from the Orange Bowl, and take a bus (or walk) — you’ll get in and out much faster. * * * UM officials have received notice from the Miami Police Department concerning shenanigans and booze at the stadium. The City of Miami is doubling its regular police patrol and will haul all offenders to the city jail, they said. There is a Miami city law prohibiting alcoholic beverages on the Orange Bowl grounds. * * * There will be an Undergraduate Student Govern- ment Dance—with a live band—alter the game in the — Student Union. Cost will be 75 cents stag, $1 drag. * * • USG PRESIDENT Kay Nabors urged students to wear white if at all possible. “We’ll have 65,000 people watching us,” she said, “and it would be nice to leave them with a good impression.” * * * Iron Arrow members will form a human corridor for the Hurricanes to run through on the way to the field. Following the game, if UM wins, fans are expected to follow suit—or at least to mob the field, or somebody. CONCERT IS HERE Page 9 The Mia Voi.. XXXVI, No. 8 University of Miami urricane Coral Carles, Fla. November 11,1960 PAINTING IS WHERE? Page 8 Did TV Debates Reveal The Men? ANOTHER? The following analysis of the TV Debates and the questions they raise is reprinted with the permission of its author. Editor Norman Cousins, and the Saturday Review, where it appeared Nov. 5, I960. Mr. Cousins will lecture at the University sometime during February. By NORMAN COUSINS Editor, Saturday Review One mark of an educated man is his ability to live comfortably and intelligently with the fact that he can’t possibly know everything. He feels no shame about the fact that he may be as uninformed about a given subject as an uneducated man, for he has substantial access to an answer if he really needs it. The disadvantage of the uneducated man is that he may be thrown off the scent too easily; he may lose himself in unfamiliar terrain where he may grab at the first intelligible answer and not necessarily the most competent one. T1IE ADVANTAGE of the edu. eated man is that his equipment includes a compass; he knows what a blind alley looks like; he doesn't clutter himself with facts beyond his needs; he knows the difference between near-authority and real authority. The trouble with the Nixon-Kennedy television debates is that they run counter to the educational process. They require that a man keep his mouth moving whether he has something to say or not. It is made to appear that the worst thing that could happen to a candidate is to be | caught without an instant answer I to a complex question. Thoughtful silence is made to appear a confession of ignorance. Hanging over the debates. apparently, is a giant neon sign; Keep Talking Until Your Time Expires. Why should it be considered a liability for a Presidential candi-[ date to admit he doesn't know? Far more impressive, in fact, than an instant display by a candidate | of his statistical knowledge of a problem would be a clear statement of how he would go about Parking Plan Turned Down ■ USG Forum Report, Page 2 Undergraduate Student Government this week turned down the proposal to regulate all on-campus and dormitory parking. ___________ EDITOR NORMAN COUSINS He Wants To Know developing the responsible means j of finding a responsible answer. [ Where would he turn for his source material? Who are the people he would consult? What is the basic philosophy that might underline his quest? The American people are not electing an Answer Man to the Presidency: if this is what they have in mind they should examine the rosters of the discarded (Continued on Page 2) Photo by Pool trill MIAMI'S COOI. WEATHER netted the Hurricane its first sweater-clad Honey of the semester. The lovely elementary education major, Beverly Schwatt, is a sophomore. Anyone for a snowball fight? A Few Tickets Left For Tonight s Dance By JACK GUARMERI A limited number of $5-per-couple tickets will be sold at the door of the Miami Beach Exhibition Hall at tonight’s 34th annual Homecoming Dance. Homecoming Committee reported one of the largest advance sales ever for the 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. event, which will feature the Ray Coniff Orchestra and Chorus. Tickets numbered from 588-633, which disappeared from the Ashe Building this week, will not he honored at the door, said the committee. Also not "honored” at the door will be alcoholic beverages and students in a state of intoxication. reported the Committee on Social Standards. Students found with liquor on — or too much in — their person will be ejected from the dance and are subject to review by the Social Standards Committee. Due to a contractual agreement with Ray Coniff, taping of the music and show is prohibited. Also, only still photographs may he taken — no movies. Group and couple pictures will be taken by Kappa Alpha Mu, UM photography honor society. Alumni will be admitted after 11 p.m. for $2 per ticket. They will receive neither a reservation nor a favor — this year a medallion charm struck in honor of UltTs 34th Homecoming. The council defeated the plan, I 7-3, after tabling it for the past three weeks. USG representative Max Sudakow, originator of the proposal, said that he w ill submit another similar plan within two weeks. Before the proposal was voted ¡down, he had suggested two I amendments. One change would have hiked the auto registration fee. The ! other would have called on the UM administration to furnish the j “police" necessary in maintaining the plan. Sudakow told the council that hy 1962. the administration will be charging the auto registration anyway. However, he pointed out. the University will not ha.ve to use the money for improving parking lots. Jeff Randall, University College freshman representative, criticized the proposed apportionment of funds. He questioned the provision that would give USG I one-sixth of the money. He suggested that all funds from the plan go toward improving present parking facilities. flitn by lilt Tnit ODK PRESIDENT BYRON SCOTT RANG IN UM’S 34TH ANNUAL HOMECOMING MONDAY Big Dance Tonight, Big Game Tomorrow—And It's Then All Over Classes Out UM classes after 10:50 this morning will be cancelled because of Homecoming activities, announced Dr. Robert Johns, executive vice-president. A final Homecoming pep-rally will be held at 11 this morning at the Student Union. Tempo Out Monday The largest collection of fiction works since the defunct UM literary magazine ‘Folio’ will be contained in the second issue of Tempo out Monday. “We have a play, poems and four short stories of both serious and whimsical varieties,” remarked Editor Byron Scott. He said that perhaps Tempo is now beginning to fill the “so-called void” created by the absence of Folio. The 36-page issue will also contain feature research articles and picture stories, including one giving pictorial proof of underwater classes at UM. “The magazine is cheap at half the price,” Scott said. “Which is probably what we should be selling it for.” mtmm ./ Blood Needwl Homer Ford is dying. The former Hurricane radio-TV editor has a severe liver disease. He has had 11 blood transfusions at Jackson Memorial Hospital. He will need more to live. Aside from his work on the Hurricane, he has written many outstanding TV and radio scripts—including “Westward, Ha!” He is also director of the UM-TV news staff and is currently interning at WTVJ. Reverend and Mrs. Ford give their deepest thanks to the students who have already contributed blood for their son. Arrangements for blood donations can be made by contacting Jackson Hospital. BRAVES,’ SHADOWS MARCH See Tappees, Page 7 |
Archive | MHC_19601111_001.tif |
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