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f Sports W rapup For ■ complete wrap-up of the fall sports scene at UM, featuring the highlights from football, basketball, soccer and swimming, by Hurricane Sports Editor Larry Sokoler, turn to page 10. 3hr iBtattt urrinutr Havens Concert Richie Havens has been scheduled to appear at UM on the night of Saturday, January 30. The folk concert will begin at 0 p.m. on the Soccer field. !D*s will be Voi. 45 No. 26 284-4401 Friday, January 9, 1970 Boosted By HARRY V1SHKOFF CW Th» Hvrncan» Halt According to James C. Grimm, Director of Housing, rates for University housing will be higher next year. Grimm said that operating deficits of more than SI million during the past two years have forced the University to increase housing rates by 10 per cent. The rate increases, which go into effect next September, will vary according to the type of room. Air conditioned single rooms, now $340 per semester, will be $375 next fall. Air conditioned double rooms, now $290 will be $320. Non-airconditioned single rooms, now $315 will be $34$. Wt,. Non-airconditioned double rooms will go from $265 to $290. Apartments for single students, now $240 will be $265. Efficiency apartments for single grad students in air conditioned Pearson Hall will go up from $95 a month to $100 per month. In non-airconditioned Mahoney Hall apartments now $85 will be $90. Rates for married students will not be increased. Grimm said that no increase in hoard rates is expected at this time. The increase in rates will allow the University to make g few improvements in some of the older dorms. Students in Mahoney Hall requested air conditioning for their lounges and office, and now should get their requests met. The increases will amount to about $30 per semester for each student, or about $1.80 per week. Get-Away Shot Fired Tuesday By PAUL BARGER Of Hi* HurrlciiM Staff Shots were fired during a b r e a k -in in the Dean of Men’s office, Tuesday, December 30. UM security guard, student William Miller, was approaching Building 21 in which the office is situated when he saw a figure running and heard four shots fired. The slugs were not found. The office was broken into around 5:00 a.m. Office* of the Associate and Assistant Deans were entered. The files were open and the contents were strewn on the floor and desks. A Crate hammer was used to force open the files and desks. Four books were taken from the office, one of which was to be used in a discipline case of theft, and a pair of sunglasses which were to be used as evidence in another theft case were also stolen. Fifty dollars in cash was removed from the Associate Dean’s office, according to Dean of Men William Sandler. Coral Gahles Police fingerprinted the rooms. However, no fingerprints were found. They surmised the thieves weV wearing gloves ^r socks •ver their hands. Raises Cast to $32 Activity Fee Hiked —Phot« bv Ktn KaHOawtet USG Council In Session Over Fee Increase Proposal ... passed bill on W ednesday USG Council Passes Resolution for General Studies Degree By MARK BERMAN Of Th# Humean» Staff USG Council passed a resolution Monday calling for administrative approval of a new “Bachelor of General Studies Degree” that will eliminate the present foreign language requirement and give students more freedom in their course selection. Patterned after a similar program instituted at the University of Michigan, the program will require 120 ‘‘unrequired” credit hours for a BGS degree. *At least 60 hours must be taken from intermediate or advanced courses and an overall average of C must be obtained for graduation. Up to 40 hours may be taken outside the College of Arts and Sciences, 20 of them being “free choice" and 20 with the approval of a student adviser. The resolution states that USG is "greatly concerned with the lack of self-examination, introspection, and general academic review at UM.” In a recent faculty evaluation poll containing the BGS proposal, 46 per cent agreed that the university’s present degree programs are “overly restrictive in the maintenance of specific sets of requirements.” - Of the faculty members polled 45 per cent gave favorable reactions to the program. If accepted by the administration the BGS degree will require 9-12 credit* of humanities including 3 credits of English composition and 9 credits from any combination of courses from the 200 level or above in philosophy, literature (English or foreign), religion, and history. Six credits will be required in Fine Arts, 6 in logic, 6-8 credits in science, and 6 in social science. President Stanford's Cabinet Approves Bail bond Program President Henry King Stanford’* Cabinet officially approved the USG Hailbond Program yesterday. The program, first proposed in September, will provide students who have been arrested, with access to immediate bond. Bonds will he financed by a $5000 allocation from the Student Activity Fee. “The program will go into operation next semester and details idll he forthcoming,M said Hon Wade, assistant USG Attorney General. ''The approval of this program is a breakthrough in the area of student serviceshe said. Fla. New Party Sponsors Jan. Moratorium Activities By JOHN REILLY Of Ih» HurrtcaiM Stall The January Moratorium activities in Miami, sponsored by the New Party, will include a Lottery of Death and educational seminars to point up some alleged failures in the Nixon administration’s Viet Nam policy. Activities on the 17th of January will take place at 12 noon at the Torch of Freedom, Biscayne Blvd. and 4th Add Touch Of Flavor Chefs Season Slaters By IRIS HOROWITZ Ol Tha Hurrtcana Stan Two chefs from Slaters Food service. Nicholas Egitton the Midwest Regional Chef and Al Heid the Southeast Regional chef, have been on campus this week to work directly with the hot food production staff on food handling and preparation techniques mainly In the board plan cafeterias. Egitton said, "We get involved with training people for openings, food preparation, sanitation, and students. We enjoy discovering Che likes and dislikes of the students for better relations; We even divulge secret recipes.” According to Egitton qualified people who have trained through the company are being shown new techniques and short cuts. “Education is primary and necessary in the area of food handling and preparation in accord with Slaters standards,” said Egitton. The chefs explained that one major problem with training these people is that employes belong to a mobile labor force and may change jobs rapidly. There are 25-27 major school food services in competition with Slaters. “It’s a competitive business, everyone’s gotta eat,” said Egitton. Tony Passarello, Chairman of the Central Food Committee said, “Thla I* exactly the sort of thing that could remedy the causes of the complaints that we’ve been trying to get the Slaters operation to rectify for the better part of the year.” "If the effects of this training program are long lasting, I think that this will be the most significant contribution to the improvement of the quality of food preparation that we've seen yet,” said Passarello. The Central Food Committee will hold a meeting on Thursday to present the results of an investigation into the board plan cafeterias. They will present the results of a student poll taken in the hoard plan cafeterias and from there they will endorse a specific set of recom-mendai^ps. Street, in Miami. The main event of the Moratorium activities will be the Lottery of Death. Individuals wearing placards with birthdates on them will be placed In a lottery. When a birthdate is called that individual will become a casualty and his placard will be placed in a coffin. The casu-a 11 y will then be covered with an American flag. According to one member of the New Party, one casualty will represent 30-40 casualties that wilt occur in Viet Nam in 1970. All birthdates will be called until there are 366 flag-draped bodies on the ground. Taps will then be played. The purpose of the activities, according to the New Party, are to educate the people as to the futility of the Administration's Vietnamiza-tion policy, the economic crisis facing the U.S. in the coming year and the immorality of the Viet Nam war. The New Party is expecting a minimum of 400 people at the Torch of Freedom. Students from all area colleges and high schools are expected. Volunteers are needed and they are asked to contact the New Party headquarters at 374-1523 or go to the New Party headquarters in the Chamber of Commerce building, room 1010, in Miami. Will Add $21,000 For Entertainment By SHABA T. PAVLOW ■ xawliva (»tier UM students will pay an additional two dollars for entertainment on their student activity fee next semester, the Board of Trustees decided last month. The increase, which raises the fee to $32 for full time undergraduate students will grant an additional $21,000 to the Student Entertainment Committee for second semester. This will raise the estimat-e d entertainment budget from $42,896 to approximately $63,000 (based on some 10,700 students who paid the fee this semester). The increase was given student approval in the November USG elections only nine months after a five dollar increase had been passed last April. Tallies for this semester’s referendum showed students in favor of the increase 744 to 318. In communicating approval of the increase. Vice President for Student Affairs William Butler vetoed a proposed constitution for the Student Entertainment Committee. The SEC allocates student funds for University entertainment and has been operating since July on a temporary basis. Butler rejected the recently proposed document because it “differed substantially from the one which had been prepared by Jim Yasser, Kay Whitten and Bill Sheed-ar during the summer months end which I (Butler) approved on a temporary basis.” "The Trustees have reiterated that the administration is charged with the responsibility of developing a sound entertainment program and that appropriate controls are to be established for the expenditure of monies from the Student Entertainment Fund," Butler said. The Vice President preferred not to reveal the specific reasons for his veto "until they can be communicated directly with the committee involved and the differences can be worked out.” Tha new document, submitted by USG President Jim Yasser with the approval of Council, calls for less admin- Dr. William Butler ... rejects constitution UM Commencement Slated For Stadium Continued on Page 2 By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Ot Th» Hurrlc«*» Staff Commencement exercises for seniors graduating this January are scheduled for Friday, January 23 at the Miami Marine Stadium. Admission tickets are currently being distributed at the bookstore and today is the last day that they will be available and that engraved announcements will be sold. Each candidate for a degree is entitled to six tickets, and if he has need of them, he may sign for additional tickets. All tickets not claimed today will be declared surplus. From January 12 through noon of January 22 these surplus tickets will be available to those students who had previously requested additional tickets, when students pick up their caps and gowns. Preceding the Commencement exercises, on January 22, a Commencement Reception for degree candidates and their guests will be held from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. in Brockway Hall of ¿he Richter Library. Instructions , concerning the commencement procedures will be issued to students when they report for their caps and gowns. Marine Stadium 18 located Salute General John Boles, Commander of the First Army stationed ln4 Texas, chats with UM president Dr. Henry —*h»to bv MIKE NESS King Stanford just prior to an awards ceremony for ROTC cadets Thursday afternoon. The general was here to present citations for outstanding service and to take a look at UM’s ROT*, division. on the, Rickenbacker Causeway, Key Biscayne. ¡smeli Speaks At Ceremony Lieuenant General Yitzhak Rabin, Ambassador of Israel to the United States, will give the commencement address at c e remonies for some 1000 candidates for de-greet from the University of Miami, Friday, January 23. His topic will be "My Country, Israel.” ’Commencement ceremonies will start at 10:30 a.m. and will be held in the Miami Marine Stadium. President Henry Ki n g Stanford wW confer the degrees. The Reverend Theodore R. Gibson, Rector of Christ Episcopal Church, will give the invocation. The Reverend Donai Grant Huston, Minister of the First United Presbyterian Church of Coral Gabies, will pronounce the benediction. Music for the ceremonies will be played by the Univer-s i t y of Miami Symphonic Band, directed by Fred McCall and conducted in part by two candidates for the Bachelor of Music degree. Robert E. Ferencik, Jr. will conduct “The Ramparts," written by Clifton Williams, UM professor of theory and composition, and N. Joseph Lowe, Jr. will conduct the Alma Mater. The President’s Commencement Reception for the degree candidate*, their families, and friends, will be held Thursday, January 22 from 4 to $ p.m. in the Brockway Lecture Hall of the Otto G. Richter Library, main campus. Ambassador Rabin will be guest of honor at a dinner hosted by President Stanford the night before the ceremonies and will also be an hon-o r e d guest at the Annual Trustee Luncheon following commencement ceremonies, at 1 p.m. in the Whitten Memorial Student Union. Yitzhak Rabin was born in Jerusalem in 1922 of America n Zionist parents. After graduating from Kadoorie Agricultural School, he began a military career which was to last for 27 years during which time he rose from underground fighter to Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces and Commander of the Israel Army during thç Six Day War.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, January 09, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-01-09 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
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_19700109 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19700109 |
Digital ID | MHC_19700109_001 |
Full Text | f Sports W rapup For ■ complete wrap-up of the fall sports scene at UM, featuring the highlights from football, basketball, soccer and swimming, by Hurricane Sports Editor Larry Sokoler, turn to page 10. 3hr iBtattt urrinutr Havens Concert Richie Havens has been scheduled to appear at UM on the night of Saturday, January 30. The folk concert will begin at 0 p.m. on the Soccer field. !D*s will be Voi. 45 No. 26 284-4401 Friday, January 9, 1970 Boosted By HARRY V1SHKOFF CW Th» Hvrncan» Halt According to James C. Grimm, Director of Housing, rates for University housing will be higher next year. Grimm said that operating deficits of more than SI million during the past two years have forced the University to increase housing rates by 10 per cent. The rate increases, which go into effect next September, will vary according to the type of room. Air conditioned single rooms, now $340 per semester, will be $375 next fall. Air conditioned double rooms, now $290 will be $320. Non-airconditioned single rooms, now $315 will be $34$. Wt,. Non-airconditioned double rooms will go from $265 to $290. Apartments for single students, now $240 will be $265. Efficiency apartments for single grad students in air conditioned Pearson Hall will go up from $95 a month to $100 per month. In non-airconditioned Mahoney Hall apartments now $85 will be $90. Rates for married students will not be increased. Grimm said that no increase in hoard rates is expected at this time. The increase in rates will allow the University to make g few improvements in some of the older dorms. Students in Mahoney Hall requested air conditioning for their lounges and office, and now should get their requests met. The increases will amount to about $30 per semester for each student, or about $1.80 per week. Get-Away Shot Fired Tuesday By PAUL BARGER Of Hi* HurrlciiM Staff Shots were fired during a b r e a k -in in the Dean of Men’s office, Tuesday, December 30. UM security guard, student William Miller, was approaching Building 21 in which the office is situated when he saw a figure running and heard four shots fired. The slugs were not found. The office was broken into around 5:00 a.m. Office* of the Associate and Assistant Deans were entered. The files were open and the contents were strewn on the floor and desks. A Crate hammer was used to force open the files and desks. Four books were taken from the office, one of which was to be used in a discipline case of theft, and a pair of sunglasses which were to be used as evidence in another theft case were also stolen. Fifty dollars in cash was removed from the Associate Dean’s office, according to Dean of Men William Sandler. Coral Gahles Police fingerprinted the rooms. However, no fingerprints were found. They surmised the thieves weV wearing gloves ^r socks •ver their hands. Raises Cast to $32 Activity Fee Hiked —Phot« bv Ktn KaHOawtet USG Council In Session Over Fee Increase Proposal ... passed bill on W ednesday USG Council Passes Resolution for General Studies Degree By MARK BERMAN Of Th# Humean» Staff USG Council passed a resolution Monday calling for administrative approval of a new “Bachelor of General Studies Degree” that will eliminate the present foreign language requirement and give students more freedom in their course selection. Patterned after a similar program instituted at the University of Michigan, the program will require 120 ‘‘unrequired” credit hours for a BGS degree. *At least 60 hours must be taken from intermediate or advanced courses and an overall average of C must be obtained for graduation. Up to 40 hours may be taken outside the College of Arts and Sciences, 20 of them being “free choice" and 20 with the approval of a student adviser. The resolution states that USG is "greatly concerned with the lack of self-examination, introspection, and general academic review at UM.” In a recent faculty evaluation poll containing the BGS proposal, 46 per cent agreed that the university’s present degree programs are “overly restrictive in the maintenance of specific sets of requirements.” - Of the faculty members polled 45 per cent gave favorable reactions to the program. If accepted by the administration the BGS degree will require 9-12 credit* of humanities including 3 credits of English composition and 9 credits from any combination of courses from the 200 level or above in philosophy, literature (English or foreign), religion, and history. Six credits will be required in Fine Arts, 6 in logic, 6-8 credits in science, and 6 in social science. President Stanford's Cabinet Approves Bail bond Program President Henry King Stanford’* Cabinet officially approved the USG Hailbond Program yesterday. The program, first proposed in September, will provide students who have been arrested, with access to immediate bond. Bonds will he financed by a $5000 allocation from the Student Activity Fee. “The program will go into operation next semester and details idll he forthcoming,M said Hon Wade, assistant USG Attorney General. ''The approval of this program is a breakthrough in the area of student serviceshe said. Fla. New Party Sponsors Jan. Moratorium Activities By JOHN REILLY Of Ih» HurrtcaiM Stall The January Moratorium activities in Miami, sponsored by the New Party, will include a Lottery of Death and educational seminars to point up some alleged failures in the Nixon administration’s Viet Nam policy. Activities on the 17th of January will take place at 12 noon at the Torch of Freedom, Biscayne Blvd. and 4th Add Touch Of Flavor Chefs Season Slaters By IRIS HOROWITZ Ol Tha Hurrtcana Stan Two chefs from Slaters Food service. Nicholas Egitton the Midwest Regional Chef and Al Heid the Southeast Regional chef, have been on campus this week to work directly with the hot food production staff on food handling and preparation techniques mainly In the board plan cafeterias. Egitton said, "We get involved with training people for openings, food preparation, sanitation, and students. We enjoy discovering Che likes and dislikes of the students for better relations; We even divulge secret recipes.” According to Egitton qualified people who have trained through the company are being shown new techniques and short cuts. “Education is primary and necessary in the area of food handling and preparation in accord with Slaters standards,” said Egitton. The chefs explained that one major problem with training these people is that employes belong to a mobile labor force and may change jobs rapidly. There are 25-27 major school food services in competition with Slaters. “It’s a competitive business, everyone’s gotta eat,” said Egitton. Tony Passarello, Chairman of the Central Food Committee said, “Thla I* exactly the sort of thing that could remedy the causes of the complaints that we’ve been trying to get the Slaters operation to rectify for the better part of the year.” "If the effects of this training program are long lasting, I think that this will be the most significant contribution to the improvement of the quality of food preparation that we've seen yet,” said Passarello. The Central Food Committee will hold a meeting on Thursday to present the results of an investigation into the board plan cafeterias. They will present the results of a student poll taken in the hoard plan cafeterias and from there they will endorse a specific set of recom-mendai^ps. Street, in Miami. The main event of the Moratorium activities will be the Lottery of Death. Individuals wearing placards with birthdates on them will be placed In a lottery. When a birthdate is called that individual will become a casualty and his placard will be placed in a coffin. The casu-a 11 y will then be covered with an American flag. According to one member of the New Party, one casualty will represent 30-40 casualties that wilt occur in Viet Nam in 1970. All birthdates will be called until there are 366 flag-draped bodies on the ground. Taps will then be played. The purpose of the activities, according to the New Party, are to educate the people as to the futility of the Administration's Vietnamiza-tion policy, the economic crisis facing the U.S. in the coming year and the immorality of the Viet Nam war. The New Party is expecting a minimum of 400 people at the Torch of Freedom. Students from all area colleges and high schools are expected. Volunteers are needed and they are asked to contact the New Party headquarters at 374-1523 or go to the New Party headquarters in the Chamber of Commerce building, room 1010, in Miami. Will Add $21,000 For Entertainment By SHABA T. PAVLOW ■ xawliva (»tier UM students will pay an additional two dollars for entertainment on their student activity fee next semester, the Board of Trustees decided last month. The increase, which raises the fee to $32 for full time undergraduate students will grant an additional $21,000 to the Student Entertainment Committee for second semester. This will raise the estimat-e d entertainment budget from $42,896 to approximately $63,000 (based on some 10,700 students who paid the fee this semester). The increase was given student approval in the November USG elections only nine months after a five dollar increase had been passed last April. Tallies for this semester’s referendum showed students in favor of the increase 744 to 318. In communicating approval of the increase. Vice President for Student Affairs William Butler vetoed a proposed constitution for the Student Entertainment Committee. The SEC allocates student funds for University entertainment and has been operating since July on a temporary basis. Butler rejected the recently proposed document because it “differed substantially from the one which had been prepared by Jim Yasser, Kay Whitten and Bill Sheed-ar during the summer months end which I (Butler) approved on a temporary basis.” "The Trustees have reiterated that the administration is charged with the responsibility of developing a sound entertainment program and that appropriate controls are to be established for the expenditure of monies from the Student Entertainment Fund," Butler said. The Vice President preferred not to reveal the specific reasons for his veto "until they can be communicated directly with the committee involved and the differences can be worked out.” Tha new document, submitted by USG President Jim Yasser with the approval of Council, calls for less admin- Dr. William Butler ... rejects constitution UM Commencement Slated For Stadium Continued on Page 2 By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Ot Th» Hurrlc«*» Staff Commencement exercises for seniors graduating this January are scheduled for Friday, January 23 at the Miami Marine Stadium. Admission tickets are currently being distributed at the bookstore and today is the last day that they will be available and that engraved announcements will be sold. Each candidate for a degree is entitled to six tickets, and if he has need of them, he may sign for additional tickets. All tickets not claimed today will be declared surplus. From January 12 through noon of January 22 these surplus tickets will be available to those students who had previously requested additional tickets, when students pick up their caps and gowns. Preceding the Commencement exercises, on January 22, a Commencement Reception for degree candidates and their guests will be held from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. in Brockway Hall of ¿he Richter Library. Instructions , concerning the commencement procedures will be issued to students when they report for their caps and gowns. Marine Stadium 18 located Salute General John Boles, Commander of the First Army stationed ln4 Texas, chats with UM president Dr. Henry —*h»to bv MIKE NESS King Stanford just prior to an awards ceremony for ROTC cadets Thursday afternoon. The general was here to present citations for outstanding service and to take a look at UM’s ROT*, division. on the, Rickenbacker Causeway, Key Biscayne. ¡smeli Speaks At Ceremony Lieuenant General Yitzhak Rabin, Ambassador of Israel to the United States, will give the commencement address at c e remonies for some 1000 candidates for de-greet from the University of Miami, Friday, January 23. His topic will be "My Country, Israel.” ’Commencement ceremonies will start at 10:30 a.m. and will be held in the Miami Marine Stadium. President Henry Ki n g Stanford wW confer the degrees. The Reverend Theodore R. Gibson, Rector of Christ Episcopal Church, will give the invocation. The Reverend Donai Grant Huston, Minister of the First United Presbyterian Church of Coral Gabies, will pronounce the benediction. Music for the ceremonies will be played by the Univer-s i t y of Miami Symphonic Band, directed by Fred McCall and conducted in part by two candidates for the Bachelor of Music degree. Robert E. Ferencik, Jr. will conduct “The Ramparts," written by Clifton Williams, UM professor of theory and composition, and N. Joseph Lowe, Jr. will conduct the Alma Mater. The President’s Commencement Reception for the degree candidate*, their families, and friends, will be held Thursday, January 22 from 4 to $ p.m. in the Brockway Lecture Hall of the Otto G. Richter Library, main campus. Ambassador Rabin will be guest of honor at a dinner hosted by President Stanford the night before the ceremonies and will also be an hon-o r e d guest at the Annual Trustee Luncheon following commencement ceremonies, at 1 p.m. in the Whitten Memorial Student Union. Yitzhak Rabin was born in Jerusalem in 1922 of America n Zionist parents. After graduating from Kadoorie Agricultural School, he began a military career which was to last for 27 years during which time he rose from underground fighter to Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces and Commander of the Israel Army during thç Six Day War. |
Archive | MHC_19700109_001.tif |
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