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imrwin er OCT 16 « The Mia Vol. XXXIV, No. 4 University of Miami ' t : f urrieane Coral Gables, Florida October 17, 1958 ★ ★ ★ For Women’s World see page 10 ★ ★ ★ Pols Open Oct. 22nd First UA Council Candidates Battle For Top Student Posts By SHEILA STEINBERG Humcase Assistant News Editer Students will go to the poils Wednesday and Thursday to elect seven students from five schools to the new Undergraduate Association Council. SOKORTIY RUSH ended with a campus-loud ricochet of feminine joy Monday. The lucky rushees who received bids from their favorite sororities enjoyed the welcoming ritual that seems to give the new Hurricane Howl Coming Soon Hurricane Howl moved into ita i ing a definite decision from the last week of preparation with a bit sponsors of the "Gator Growl.” He oi heartening news adding to the hopes to have it within the next few show’s attraction. Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, said earlier this week that the best act from the gala event might be invited to participate in the University of Florida’s “Gator Growl,” one of the nation’s top college student show presentations. However, Dr. Adams is still await- days Hurricane Howl, first student production of its kind at UM, will be staged at Dade County Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25. The show will include skits ranging from Trojan days, blind dating and football games put on by sororities, fraternities and several in- United Fund Charity Drive At UM Expected To Surpass $17,000 Leaders of the United Fund charity drive on campus expressed confidence in surpassing last year’s $17,081.44 donation from UM personnel as the drive went into its final week. “Last year $17,081.44 was collected BeautyQueens Rule Campus Beauty on the UM campus will have an opportunity to display itself with numerous contests open to UM coeds in the next few months. Among the pageants in which women students will compete are the Orange Bowl Contest, Miss Florida Contest, Homecoming Queen Contest, ROTC Angel Flight Queen Contest, Citrus Queen Contest, and Miss Miami, Miss Miami Beach, Miss Coral Gables, Miss Hialeah, and Miss South Miami. Orange Bowl Queen Contest entries are no w be ing received from girls between 18 and 24 years of age. Semi-finalists are chosen from their photographs, and will be judged by a group picked by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. All the “Miss” contests are held in the spring and all have the same rules. These contests are sponsored by the JC's in their respective cities. To enter a girl must be 18 by September 1, 1959, and not be over 28. Contestants are judged in three contests: the talent contest, the evening gown contest, and the bathing suit contest. from 1,144 donators with $15 being the average donation,” Dr. Joseph H. Young, Assistant Dean of Business Administration said. 73.3 per cent of UM’s personnel gave to the fund. Dr. Young, who works closely with Dean Grover A. J. Noetzel, UF Drive chairman on campus, will attend a UF luncheon Monday, at the Bis-cayne Terrace Hotel. He will report the drive's progress and hear bulletins about money collected and difficulties from colleagues of the "Educational Institutional Division of the United Fund.” All education and government departments fall into this division. The university will receive far more money from overall contributions for various school programs than it conrtibutes. Three UF projects will give the School of Medicine $50,000 and equipment. Other projects which will grant money to die school are expected. Students may donate through Dean Noble Hendrix’s office. On The Inside Hurricane Honey Little Man on Campus 8 Letters to Editor 1« 11 14 Sports 16-20 Candidates, who have seven days to garner votes, began their campaign last Wednesday. Biographical sketches of the candidates follow: ARTS AND SCIENCES: (2 electoral positions) Judith Roe, 20-year-old senior home economics major from Miami. A senator in the old Student Body Government, she is a member of the Delta Gamma sorority and the southeastern district of the Florida Home Economics Association. Ann Ashworth, 20-year-old junior English major, is a native of Coral Gables and member of the Delta Zeta sorority, the YWCA, Student Religious Association and is a former SBG senator. Judith Medina, a human relations major, is a member of Alfa, international women's language honor-j ary, and secretary of the Interna-_______ tional Center. The 20-year-old j undependent groups on campus. Theme ,or *a5 the foreign student secretary of the show is “Campus Capers of,0 ’58"___Joe Burgstresser, radio-TV-jour- Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu, Sigma nall5m m“jor f.r0™ New York Alpha Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, ‘s. Reward and house manager of Phi Delta Theta, Kappa Sigma, Sig- Alpha Epsllon 500,81 frater- ma Phi Epsilon, and Sigma Chi fra- ritti 11 Wtiuii pledges the feeling of being “queens for the day.” Almost 200 rushees were pledged by 14 sororities. Next week The Hurricane will list the names of all pledges. See story on Page 12. . nity. ternities will each present skits. Sororities putting on skits are Chi Omega, Delta Gamma and Delta Delta Delta. Independent organizations contributing skits are the Glee Club, Men's Residence Hall Association, Band of The Hour, Wesley Foundation and Hillel Foundation. The winning skit will be announced at midnight in the Electrician's Ballroom, 1657 N. W. 17th Ave., where a student dance will be held following the show at 10:30. Master of ceremonies will be SCHOOL OF BUSINESS: (2 electoral positions) William Keegan, a 25-year-old senior marketing major from Fair-field, Conn. Jim Blosser, marketing major. The 20-year-old junior was a senator in SBG and was chairman of the grievance committee in the Senate. He is president of Sigma Chi fraternity and treasurer of the Student Union Board of Governors. David Yelen is a 19-year-old junior accounting major. He is president of Phi Eta Sigma, scholastic honor- Harry Barrow, a senior in the School ary; vice president of Alpha Phi of Music. A second master of cere- Omega, service fraternity, and win-monies will be announced at the ner of the Outstanding Freshman beginning of the show. | Award in 1957. Yelen was a senator in SBG, a member of the School of Business Legislative Council and an associate member of the Student Union Board. He is also a member of Alpha Sigma Epsilon, leadership honorary. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION: (1 electoral position) Christine Woidek, 22-year-old senior from Lakewood, Ohio, was official hostess of SBG and secretary of publicity last year. Susan Dunkel, a 21-year-old sophomore from Miami. She is president of Alpha Lambda Delta, scholarship honorary, and is a member of YWCA; Gamma Sigma Sigma, national service sorority; Student Education Association and the Association for Childhood Education. SCHOOL OF MUSIC: (1 electoral position) John Myers, the only candidate to file for the Music School, was former secretary and senator from the Music School. He automatically wins the school’s electoral position. He plays in the Band of the Hour, is the dorm adviser for the Men’s Residence Hall Association, a member of the Student Union Board and sings in the UM Chorus. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING: (1 electoral position) Wilson Leary, 21-year-old senior and Allen Roth, 19-year-old junior are competing for the berth. Tables will be set up in the upper lounge of the Student Union on Wednesday and Thursday from 8:30 to 4:30, to give all students the opportunity to vote. Voters must be full-time students and must present their identification cards before they can vote. The School of Engineering will set up tables outside the Box Theater on North Campus to enable engineering students to vote. HURRICANE HOWL is approaching UM grounds with a swirling degree of intensity as ever swept the campus since 1926. Six members of Sigma Chi, social fraternity, are seen going through their paces as they prepare their skit for next Friday’s gala event. Hie tliti ly Nmus show, which is fashioned after the University of Florida’s nationally famous ‘Gator Bowl” presentation will have skits and acts from many of UM’s fraternities, sororities, and independent clubs. Sam Adams is chairman of the project.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 17, 1958 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1958-10-17 |
Coverage Temporal | 1950-1959 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (20 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_19581017 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19581017 |
Digital ID | MHC_19581017_001 |
Full Text | imrwin er OCT 16 « The Mia Vol. XXXIV, No. 4 University of Miami ' t : f urrieane Coral Gables, Florida October 17, 1958 ★ ★ ★ For Women’s World see page 10 ★ ★ ★ Pols Open Oct. 22nd First UA Council Candidates Battle For Top Student Posts By SHEILA STEINBERG Humcase Assistant News Editer Students will go to the poils Wednesday and Thursday to elect seven students from five schools to the new Undergraduate Association Council. SOKORTIY RUSH ended with a campus-loud ricochet of feminine joy Monday. The lucky rushees who received bids from their favorite sororities enjoyed the welcoming ritual that seems to give the new Hurricane Howl Coming Soon Hurricane Howl moved into ita i ing a definite decision from the last week of preparation with a bit sponsors of the "Gator Growl.” He oi heartening news adding to the hopes to have it within the next few show’s attraction. Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, said earlier this week that the best act from the gala event might be invited to participate in the University of Florida’s “Gator Growl,” one of the nation’s top college student show presentations. However, Dr. Adams is still await- days Hurricane Howl, first student production of its kind at UM, will be staged at Dade County Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25. The show will include skits ranging from Trojan days, blind dating and football games put on by sororities, fraternities and several in- United Fund Charity Drive At UM Expected To Surpass $17,000 Leaders of the United Fund charity drive on campus expressed confidence in surpassing last year’s $17,081.44 donation from UM personnel as the drive went into its final week. “Last year $17,081.44 was collected BeautyQueens Rule Campus Beauty on the UM campus will have an opportunity to display itself with numerous contests open to UM coeds in the next few months. Among the pageants in which women students will compete are the Orange Bowl Contest, Miss Florida Contest, Homecoming Queen Contest, ROTC Angel Flight Queen Contest, Citrus Queen Contest, and Miss Miami, Miss Miami Beach, Miss Coral Gables, Miss Hialeah, and Miss South Miami. Orange Bowl Queen Contest entries are no w be ing received from girls between 18 and 24 years of age. Semi-finalists are chosen from their photographs, and will be judged by a group picked by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. All the “Miss” contests are held in the spring and all have the same rules. These contests are sponsored by the JC's in their respective cities. To enter a girl must be 18 by September 1, 1959, and not be over 28. Contestants are judged in three contests: the talent contest, the evening gown contest, and the bathing suit contest. from 1,144 donators with $15 being the average donation,” Dr. Joseph H. Young, Assistant Dean of Business Administration said. 73.3 per cent of UM’s personnel gave to the fund. Dr. Young, who works closely with Dean Grover A. J. Noetzel, UF Drive chairman on campus, will attend a UF luncheon Monday, at the Bis-cayne Terrace Hotel. He will report the drive's progress and hear bulletins about money collected and difficulties from colleagues of the "Educational Institutional Division of the United Fund.” All education and government departments fall into this division. The university will receive far more money from overall contributions for various school programs than it conrtibutes. Three UF projects will give the School of Medicine $50,000 and equipment. Other projects which will grant money to die school are expected. Students may donate through Dean Noble Hendrix’s office. On The Inside Hurricane Honey Little Man on Campus 8 Letters to Editor 1« 11 14 Sports 16-20 Candidates, who have seven days to garner votes, began their campaign last Wednesday. Biographical sketches of the candidates follow: ARTS AND SCIENCES: (2 electoral positions) Judith Roe, 20-year-old senior home economics major from Miami. A senator in the old Student Body Government, she is a member of the Delta Gamma sorority and the southeastern district of the Florida Home Economics Association. Ann Ashworth, 20-year-old junior English major, is a native of Coral Gables and member of the Delta Zeta sorority, the YWCA, Student Religious Association and is a former SBG senator. Judith Medina, a human relations major, is a member of Alfa, international women's language honor-j ary, and secretary of the Interna-_______ tional Center. The 20-year-old j undependent groups on campus. Theme ,or *a5 the foreign student secretary of the show is “Campus Capers of,0 ’58"___Joe Burgstresser, radio-TV-jour- Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu, Sigma nall5m m“jor f.r0™ New York Alpha Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, ‘s. Reward and house manager of Phi Delta Theta, Kappa Sigma, Sig- Alpha Epsllon 500,81 frater- ma Phi Epsilon, and Sigma Chi fra- ritti 11 Wtiuii pledges the feeling of being “queens for the day.” Almost 200 rushees were pledged by 14 sororities. Next week The Hurricane will list the names of all pledges. See story on Page 12. . nity. ternities will each present skits. Sororities putting on skits are Chi Omega, Delta Gamma and Delta Delta Delta. Independent organizations contributing skits are the Glee Club, Men's Residence Hall Association, Band of The Hour, Wesley Foundation and Hillel Foundation. The winning skit will be announced at midnight in the Electrician's Ballroom, 1657 N. W. 17th Ave., where a student dance will be held following the show at 10:30. Master of ceremonies will be SCHOOL OF BUSINESS: (2 electoral positions) William Keegan, a 25-year-old senior marketing major from Fair-field, Conn. Jim Blosser, marketing major. The 20-year-old junior was a senator in SBG and was chairman of the grievance committee in the Senate. He is president of Sigma Chi fraternity and treasurer of the Student Union Board of Governors. David Yelen is a 19-year-old junior accounting major. He is president of Phi Eta Sigma, scholastic honor- Harry Barrow, a senior in the School ary; vice president of Alpha Phi of Music. A second master of cere- Omega, service fraternity, and win-monies will be announced at the ner of the Outstanding Freshman beginning of the show. | Award in 1957. Yelen was a senator in SBG, a member of the School of Business Legislative Council and an associate member of the Student Union Board. He is also a member of Alpha Sigma Epsilon, leadership honorary. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION: (1 electoral position) Christine Woidek, 22-year-old senior from Lakewood, Ohio, was official hostess of SBG and secretary of publicity last year. Susan Dunkel, a 21-year-old sophomore from Miami. She is president of Alpha Lambda Delta, scholarship honorary, and is a member of YWCA; Gamma Sigma Sigma, national service sorority; Student Education Association and the Association for Childhood Education. SCHOOL OF MUSIC: (1 electoral position) John Myers, the only candidate to file for the Music School, was former secretary and senator from the Music School. He automatically wins the school’s electoral position. He plays in the Band of the Hour, is the dorm adviser for the Men’s Residence Hall Association, a member of the Student Union Board and sings in the UM Chorus. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING: (1 electoral position) Wilson Leary, 21-year-old senior and Allen Roth, 19-year-old junior are competing for the berth. Tables will be set up in the upper lounge of the Student Union on Wednesday and Thursday from 8:30 to 4:30, to give all students the opportunity to vote. Voters must be full-time students and must present their identification cards before they can vote. The School of Engineering will set up tables outside the Box Theater on North Campus to enable engineering students to vote. HURRICANE HOWL is approaching UM grounds with a swirling degree of intensity as ever swept the campus since 1926. Six members of Sigma Chi, social fraternity, are seen going through their paces as they prepare their skit for next Friday’s gala event. Hie tliti ly Nmus show, which is fashioned after the University of Florida’s nationally famous ‘Gator Bowl” presentation will have skits and acts from many of UM’s fraternities, sororities, and independent clubs. Sam Adams is chairman of the project. |
Archive | MHC_19581017_001.tif |
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