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Hurricane Howl: Tomorro Students, Faculty Expected To Fill Dade Auditorium By LOGAN FULRATH HwricwM Stiff Rifirttr The Mia Vol. XXXIV, No. 5 University of Miami urricane —1 MlfTRSITY OF KUMl OCT 24 Idas LIBRARY Coral Cables, Florida October 24, 1958 Council A LETTER A DAY brought the Hurricane Howl to the UM campus. Committee members started thirteen days ago putting up one letter a day over the Student Union entrance. Saturday night the “Howl” arrives at the Dade County Auditorium. Coed Residence Hall Election Scheduled Next Wednesday Hurricane Howl will unleash all of its entertaining fury at 7:30 tomorrow night at Dade County Auditorium. An estimated 2,000 are expected to flock to the gala event—the first of its kind at UM. Members of Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity are coordinating the 17 take-offs to be presented by fraternities, sororities, and independent clubs on the show's theme, “Campus Capers of ’58.” Senior Henry Barrow and comedian Ronnie Shaw will be masters of ceremonies. An open dance following the show at 10:30 p.m. at the Electricians' Ballroom, 1657 N. W. 17th Ave., will feature Dick Meyer’s Orchestra. Vocalist Diane Lappin and Fred Ashe and his combo will also entertain. Awards will be presented for the three best skits, one each to a fraternity, a sorority, and an independent club. Winners will be announced at midnight in the ballroom. There will be second and third place awards given also. Among the fraternities competing, Sigma Nu will give a comic pantomime, “The William Tell Overture"; Lambda Chi Alpha, “A Blind Date”; and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, “Football Players’ Lament,” which is set to a Negro spiritual. Sigma Chi has “The Three Sigs” and Pi Kappa Alpha, “The Boy Friend.” Kappa Sigma fraternity will present “Tops on Campus,” a takeoff on a sorority rush party. Phi Delta Theta will act out ‘The Good Old Days” and Sigma Phi will do “Slop Shop Ballet.” Chi Omega sorority will put on a skit, “They Failed To Make It,” described as “a woeful tale of a hunch of girls.” Delta Gamma has “Is Greek To Me” while Delta Delta Delta is presenting “Steam Heat." The Glee Club will represent a “Chorus of Afterbeats” and the Band a “Friday Night.” The Radio and TV Guild enact 'Tennessee Williams’ Storybook Playhouse.” The Wesley Foundation will give “SofapUlo—a Tragic Triangle” and the Hlllel Foundation “Beatnik Explosive.” A $1.00 donation to the UM Charity Fund will cover both the show and the dance. Chi Gamma Iota members are selling tickets in the Breezeway and in the Snakepit. Proceeds from “Howl” will supplant charity funds usually raised through the annual Clothing Drive and the Community Chest Drive. Mel Baker, John Coegriff, John Myers, and Dan Cook, co-chairmen of the “Howl" Committee, have been working with Chairman Sam Adams in publicizing the program. Elections for the Women’s Residence Halls are scheduled for next Wednesday. Coeds from the Main Residence Area, the new 720 Hall, and Eaton Hall will be voting. The 720 Hall and Eaton Hall girls will elect their own hall officers and representatives to their individual hall councils. The candidates in the Main Residence, which is electing its own officers for the first time, are Sandra Zobrist and Frances Sheffield for president; Mary Elizabeth Lane, Joan Basile, and Toni Maslow for vice president; Fran Kovich and Janice Paulsen for secretary; and Adrienne Paumfi and Sandra Woess- ner for treasurer. In the 720 Hall the nomination of Della Russel for president and Eleanor Rubin for treasurer are uncontested. Roberta Shaprin, Naomi Friedman, Julie Karan, Irma Corely and Joan Ostrow are candidates for vice president. Carol Ann Leaser and Ann Furlong are running for secretary. Uneontested nominees in Eaton Hall are Kay Nabors for president, Ilene Kaplan for recording secretary, Penny Press for corresponding secretary, and Karin Kehl for treasurer. Deedee Wellend and Iris Rubenstein are running for vice president. Ptiti ty Ntmu Only a small percentage of the thousands of students eligible to vote turned out at the polls. Thursday was the last day of voting. WHERE IS EVERYBODY? This was the scene Wednesday in the Student Union upper lounge during voting in the Undergraduate Association election. Elected 404 Students Turn Out To Decide Top UA Posts By I.ARRIE SCHMIDT Hirrican News CUitir Seven students were elected to Undergraduate Association Council offices Wednesday and Thursday as 404 students out of the more than 8,000 students eligible to vote cast ballots. Elected as representatives to the Central Council from the individual schools were: Arts and Sciences: Joseph Burgstresser and Ann Ashworth. Business Administration: James Blosser and David Yelen. Education: Susan Dunkel. Engineering: Allen Roth. Music: John Myers. The representatives will hold office until March, 1959. In the Arts and Sciences election, Joseph Burgstresser compiled the largest number of votes, 129, while Ann Ashworth beat out Judith Roe by one vote, 67-66, to win the school's second representative position. Arts and Sciences is allowed two representatives under the new constitution because it has more than 2,000 students enrolled. Judith Medina, the fourth candidate in the Arts and Sciences election, collected 51 votes. BURGSTRESSER James Blosser polled 84 ballots to lead the voting in the School of Business and his co-representative, David Yelen, compiled 50. A third Business candidate, William Keegan, garnered 39 votes. The School of Business also has over 2,000 students enrolled to authorize two representatives. In the School of Education, Susan Dunkel had an easy victory over Christine Woidek, receiving 35 votes over the latter’s 7. She will be the sole representative from her school which has fewer than 2,000 students. Allen Roth edged out Wilson Leary in a close School of Engineering vote. Roth received 40 ballots to Leary’s 37. He will be the sole representative. John Myers was automatically elected as the School of Music's sole representative since there was no opposing candidate. Arts and Science winners, Joe Bergstresser and Ann Ashworth are a senior and junior respectively. Burgstresser is a radio-TV major from New York City. He is also steward and house manager of Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity. Ashworth, 20-year-old English major, is a native of Coral Gables. She is a member of Delta Zeta sorority, the YWCA, Student Religious Association and a former SBG senator. James Blosser and David Yelen, School of Business victors, are both juniors. Blosser is a 20-year-old marketing major and a native of Lafayette, Indiana. He was a senator in the old SBG and chairman of its grievance committee. Yelen, 19, was winner of last year’s Outstanding Freshman Award. He is an accounting major, president of Phi Eta Sigma, scholastic honorary, and vice president of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. His home is at 6357 S.W. 10th St. in Miami. School of Education’s elected representative, Susan Dunkel, 21-year-old sophomore, is president of Alpha Lambda Delta, scholarship honorary. She is also a member of the YWCA, Gamma Sigma Sigma, national service sorority, Student Education Association and the Association for Childhood Education. She lives at 922 S.W. St. in Miami. ASHWORTH BLOSSER YELEN DUNKEL Allen Roth, winner from the School of Engineering, is a 19-year-old sophomore. He is an independent majoring in electrical engineering. His home is at 3541 S.W. 16th Terrace in Miami. The new UA Council representatives will assume their offices immediately. Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities and UA adviser, expressed regret over the small number of votes cast. Less than five per cent of the eligible-to-vote students did so. "I am certainly disappointed in the poor voting response the candidates received yesterday and today,” he said. “But I am grateful to those students who did vote. They were the ones who were sincerely interested in saving student government for their fellow students.” ROTH
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 24, 1958 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1958-10-24 |
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_19581024 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19581024 |
Digital ID | MHC_19581024_001 |
Full Text | Hurricane Howl: Tomorro Students, Faculty Expected To Fill Dade Auditorium By LOGAN FULRATH HwricwM Stiff Rifirttr The Mia Vol. XXXIV, No. 5 University of Miami urricane —1 MlfTRSITY OF KUMl OCT 24 Idas LIBRARY Coral Cables, Florida October 24, 1958 Council A LETTER A DAY brought the Hurricane Howl to the UM campus. Committee members started thirteen days ago putting up one letter a day over the Student Union entrance. Saturday night the “Howl” arrives at the Dade County Auditorium. Coed Residence Hall Election Scheduled Next Wednesday Hurricane Howl will unleash all of its entertaining fury at 7:30 tomorrow night at Dade County Auditorium. An estimated 2,000 are expected to flock to the gala event—the first of its kind at UM. Members of Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity are coordinating the 17 take-offs to be presented by fraternities, sororities, and independent clubs on the show's theme, “Campus Capers of ’58.” Senior Henry Barrow and comedian Ronnie Shaw will be masters of ceremonies. An open dance following the show at 10:30 p.m. at the Electricians' Ballroom, 1657 N. W. 17th Ave., will feature Dick Meyer’s Orchestra. Vocalist Diane Lappin and Fred Ashe and his combo will also entertain. Awards will be presented for the three best skits, one each to a fraternity, a sorority, and an independent club. Winners will be announced at midnight in the ballroom. There will be second and third place awards given also. Among the fraternities competing, Sigma Nu will give a comic pantomime, “The William Tell Overture"; Lambda Chi Alpha, “A Blind Date”; and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, “Football Players’ Lament,” which is set to a Negro spiritual. Sigma Chi has “The Three Sigs” and Pi Kappa Alpha, “The Boy Friend.” Kappa Sigma fraternity will present “Tops on Campus,” a takeoff on a sorority rush party. Phi Delta Theta will act out ‘The Good Old Days” and Sigma Phi will do “Slop Shop Ballet.” Chi Omega sorority will put on a skit, “They Failed To Make It,” described as “a woeful tale of a hunch of girls.” Delta Gamma has “Is Greek To Me” while Delta Delta Delta is presenting “Steam Heat." The Glee Club will represent a “Chorus of Afterbeats” and the Band a “Friday Night.” The Radio and TV Guild enact 'Tennessee Williams’ Storybook Playhouse.” The Wesley Foundation will give “SofapUlo—a Tragic Triangle” and the Hlllel Foundation “Beatnik Explosive.” A $1.00 donation to the UM Charity Fund will cover both the show and the dance. Chi Gamma Iota members are selling tickets in the Breezeway and in the Snakepit. Proceeds from “Howl” will supplant charity funds usually raised through the annual Clothing Drive and the Community Chest Drive. Mel Baker, John Coegriff, John Myers, and Dan Cook, co-chairmen of the “Howl" Committee, have been working with Chairman Sam Adams in publicizing the program. Elections for the Women’s Residence Halls are scheduled for next Wednesday. Coeds from the Main Residence Area, the new 720 Hall, and Eaton Hall will be voting. The 720 Hall and Eaton Hall girls will elect their own hall officers and representatives to their individual hall councils. The candidates in the Main Residence, which is electing its own officers for the first time, are Sandra Zobrist and Frances Sheffield for president; Mary Elizabeth Lane, Joan Basile, and Toni Maslow for vice president; Fran Kovich and Janice Paulsen for secretary; and Adrienne Paumfi and Sandra Woess- ner for treasurer. In the 720 Hall the nomination of Della Russel for president and Eleanor Rubin for treasurer are uncontested. Roberta Shaprin, Naomi Friedman, Julie Karan, Irma Corely and Joan Ostrow are candidates for vice president. Carol Ann Leaser and Ann Furlong are running for secretary. Uneontested nominees in Eaton Hall are Kay Nabors for president, Ilene Kaplan for recording secretary, Penny Press for corresponding secretary, and Karin Kehl for treasurer. Deedee Wellend and Iris Rubenstein are running for vice president. Ptiti ty Ntmu Only a small percentage of the thousands of students eligible to vote turned out at the polls. Thursday was the last day of voting. WHERE IS EVERYBODY? This was the scene Wednesday in the Student Union upper lounge during voting in the Undergraduate Association election. Elected 404 Students Turn Out To Decide Top UA Posts By I.ARRIE SCHMIDT Hirrican News CUitir Seven students were elected to Undergraduate Association Council offices Wednesday and Thursday as 404 students out of the more than 8,000 students eligible to vote cast ballots. Elected as representatives to the Central Council from the individual schools were: Arts and Sciences: Joseph Burgstresser and Ann Ashworth. Business Administration: James Blosser and David Yelen. Education: Susan Dunkel. Engineering: Allen Roth. Music: John Myers. The representatives will hold office until March, 1959. In the Arts and Sciences election, Joseph Burgstresser compiled the largest number of votes, 129, while Ann Ashworth beat out Judith Roe by one vote, 67-66, to win the school's second representative position. Arts and Sciences is allowed two representatives under the new constitution because it has more than 2,000 students enrolled. Judith Medina, the fourth candidate in the Arts and Sciences election, collected 51 votes. BURGSTRESSER James Blosser polled 84 ballots to lead the voting in the School of Business and his co-representative, David Yelen, compiled 50. A third Business candidate, William Keegan, garnered 39 votes. The School of Business also has over 2,000 students enrolled to authorize two representatives. In the School of Education, Susan Dunkel had an easy victory over Christine Woidek, receiving 35 votes over the latter’s 7. She will be the sole representative from her school which has fewer than 2,000 students. Allen Roth edged out Wilson Leary in a close School of Engineering vote. Roth received 40 ballots to Leary’s 37. He will be the sole representative. John Myers was automatically elected as the School of Music's sole representative since there was no opposing candidate. Arts and Science winners, Joe Bergstresser and Ann Ashworth are a senior and junior respectively. Burgstresser is a radio-TV major from New York City. He is also steward and house manager of Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity. Ashworth, 20-year-old English major, is a native of Coral Gables. She is a member of Delta Zeta sorority, the YWCA, Student Religious Association and a former SBG senator. James Blosser and David Yelen, School of Business victors, are both juniors. Blosser is a 20-year-old marketing major and a native of Lafayette, Indiana. He was a senator in the old SBG and chairman of its grievance committee. Yelen, 19, was winner of last year’s Outstanding Freshman Award. He is an accounting major, president of Phi Eta Sigma, scholastic honorary, and vice president of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. His home is at 6357 S.W. 10th St. in Miami. School of Education’s elected representative, Susan Dunkel, 21-year-old sophomore, is president of Alpha Lambda Delta, scholarship honorary. She is also a member of the YWCA, Gamma Sigma Sigma, national service sorority, Student Education Association and the Association for Childhood Education. She lives at 922 S.W. St. in Miami. ASHWORTH BLOSSER YELEN DUNKEL Allen Roth, winner from the School of Engineering, is a 19-year-old sophomore. He is an independent majoring in electrical engineering. His home is at 3541 S.W. 16th Terrace in Miami. The new UA Council representatives will assume their offices immediately. Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities and UA adviser, expressed regret over the small number of votes cast. Less than five per cent of the eligible-to-vote students did so. "I am certainly disappointed in the poor voting response the candidates received yesterday and today,” he said. “But I am grateful to those students who did vote. They were the ones who were sincerely interested in saving student government for their fellow students.” ROTH |
Archive | MHC_19581024_001.tif |
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