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__ UNIVERSITÀ Of MIAMI Lambda Chi Wins Homecoming Trophym By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of Th« Hurricane start The 1969 winners of Homecoming were announced Saturday night at the Homecoming dance held at the Hotel Americana. , Trophies were awarded for decorations (house decorations, posters and floats) and spirit. “I think that this year’s Homecoming was far superior to any other Homecoming we’ve had here at the university because of the marked increase in participation of the independents, the quality of all the entries in the parade, and all the Executive Committee was able to do because of an increased budget,” said overall Homecoming chairman Doug Quinn. The ‘Overall Independent’ award went to the Mahoney-Pearson Complex and the ‘Overall Fraternity’ Award went to Lambda Chi Alpha. Delta Gamma was the recipient of the ‘Overall Sorority’ aware.. The ‘Overall Homecoming’ trophy for 1969 went to Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. ZBT was first runner up for the trophy while Sigma Chi was second runner up. .. Ibis year's Homecoming was superior lo any other.” '«mirerà Winner of the ‘Homecoming Spirit Trophy’ was Delta Zeta sorority. COISO (the Council of International Student Organizations) was selected as the ‘International Organization Contributing the most to Homecoming’. The award of ‘Best Decorated Car’ was given to Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority. In the area of ‘House Decorations’ Lambda Chi Alpha placed first, and ZBT was second in the fraternity division. Phi Sigma Sigma took first place la the sorority division while Sigma Delta Tau placed second. In the independent category the Mahoney-Pearson Complex captured fi»st place honors, while Apartment No. 41 took second place. Winners of the Poster Contest In the indepe sion was the Mahoney-Pearson Complex, in th „¡.LIBRARY Division it was Delta Zeta, and the fraternity division winner was Tau Epsilon Phi. The next category judged was parade entries that cost over $200 to construct. In this Upper Independent category the first place went to COISO with the Newman Center and the 960 Complex tieing for second.« In the Lower Independent category of floats costing less than $200, the first place award went to the Mahoney-Pearson Complex while the second place award went to the Hurricane Skiers. In the sorority division Alpha Epsilon Phi took first place honors while Delta Gamma and Chi Omega tied for the number two spot. ZBT took the first place award in the upper division fraternity competition and Sigma Chi received the second place award. In the lower division Lambda Chi Alpha was the first . place recipient while Phi Epsilon Pi placed second. Queen Sabine Reigns . . over Homecoming festicitien Drug Report Miami's “Cuban Mafia” is reportedly responsible for most of the illegal drug flow through southern Florida. See page 3 for a complete report. Jazz Concert Jerry Coker will direct the UM Jazz Band tonight in the Beaumont Lecture Hall at 8:30. Turn to page 7 for more details. Voi. 45, No. 16 Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1969 281-4101 Students Travel To D.C. By JOHN REILLY Of Th« Hurried» Start Two hundred UM students will travel to Washington, D.C. tomorrow to take part in the'November Moratorium activities. A c c ording to Peter Yaffe, coordinator of the drive to D. C., all students will go b y car to W ssh ington. Yaffe stressed the point that there is plenty of room for anyone who wants to go. Yaffe said that the group will leave on Wednesday night at 9 p.m. from the Wesley Foundation. He added that people can join the group right up to departing time. Lloyd Tannenbaum, co coordinator of the drive, said that the cars will not travel in a caravan. “Three or four cars at a time will leave,” said Tannenbaum. Yaffe said the committee is asking all students that are going to Washington to bring food staples with them. “Negotiations with Slater’s for free sandwiches and coffee are going on right now,” said Yaffe, “but nothing is definite yet.” He said the group will participate in the “March Against Death,” which starts on Thursday, and Saturday’s mass march, for which a permit has not been issued. Yaffe said the group will participate in the mass march regardless of whether or not a permit is issued. “We feel that this Is a ploy by the Nixon Administration to encourage violence, therefore discrediting the peace movement and scaring people away from Washington,” he said. “This has had the reverse effect and more people are expected than originally,” added Yaffe. "All we can do is hope for no violence,” said Tannenbaum. Anyone interested in the Moratorium activities can stop at the Moratorium table in the Breezeway or call Peter Yaffe at 3082 or Lloyd Tannenbaum at 3662. Love-In Staged On ‘The Rock9 Over 1,000 people were attracted to UM’s second Love-In held on “The Rock” Sunday afternoon. The Love-In, sponsored by the New Party, featured music groups like "The Military Industrial Complex” and “Echo.” Hank Williams, head of the North Miami Beach “love-in gang,” which has staged love-ins at Crandon Park and Coconut Grove, was Invited by the New Party to head the UM edition. The afternoon's activities also included talking about the Moratorium and peace. Planners of the Love-In hope to stage more in the future. f .. Tripoli teas acting without any authorization .. —Jim Yasser USG President “J think USG has lacked direction this year” —Louis Tripoli Ex-Attorney General By SHARA T. PAVLOW Hurricane Exccutiv« Editor In a move surprising to many, USG Attorney General Lou Tripoli was fired, Saturday, by President Jim Yasser when he attempted to call a meeting of the President’s Cabinet on his own authority. The incident arose when Yasser was informed of a press release to the Hurricane announcing the first Cabinet meeting of the year to be held. “That was the first I had heard of any such meeting,” Yasser told the Hurricane. “When I asked him (Tripoli) about it, he said he left a note for me concerning the meeting. I never received any note,” Yasser said. Tripoli claims the Cabinet has been run strictly on the initiative of its individual members and without direction. "I felt that if neither the council nor the Executive would lead student government, the Cabinet should,” he said in defense of his actions. “I don’t feel there has been any direction to student government this year.” According to Tripoli, the meeting was for the purpose of finding out what Cabinet members had accomplished, to make future plans and assignments, and to coordinate a philosophy of student government’s aims for the coming year. If a meeting of the Presidential Cabinet is to be called, the President is the one to call it. Yasser said. “I did no such thing and Tripoli was acting without any authorization in releasing it to the Hurricane,” he said. Yasser made mention of appointing Don Wade, now a presidential assistant to the post, but Wade later denied that anything had been settled. “Jim hasn’t seriously sat down and discussed it with me, so I’m not making any plans,” he said in a believable Kennedy accent. Tripoli later announced his candidacy for the seat of senior class representative to USG Council vacated two weeks ago by Cindy Hill. . SAFAC Petitions Available For Acting 4 Without A uthority> USG President Yasser Fires Attorney General —Photo By ANDRE FESKO Louis Rosenstiel at Dedication Proceedings ... in Miami Marine Stadium Marine Center Enters New Era —Photo By BUZZ BIRNBACH Students Carry Signs, Flags ... to protest tear policy Demonstrators March To Nixons Compound By FRAN TARADASH Of Th« Hurrican* Start UM honored Lewis Rosenstiel and his late wife, Dorothy H. Rosenstiel, at ceremonies at the Marine Stadium Sunday. In recognition of the Rosenstiel gift of $12.2 million to the University, the ceremonies marked the changing of the names of the Marine Institute to the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and the School of Medicine to the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel Medical Sciences Building. President Stanford opened the ceremonies with these words, “Help us say thank-you to a great friend of the University.” F. G. Walton Smith, Dean of the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, called Rosenstiel “something of a modern oceanographer.” Smith also said that the gift will be a substantial foundation to help UM reach the financial goal set by the Golden Anniversary Development Program which ends in 1975. Dr. W. Dean Warren, Vice-. President for Medical Affairs, said that, “The University of Miami is headed for a rendezvous with greatness.” he also went on to explain the history of the Medical School and its need for financial hacking, and called the Rosenstiel gift “The greatest philanthropic investment made in the State of Florida" and that the gift would provide the “thrust to take UM to that rendezvous with greatness, greatness.” Dean Lewis, of the School of Law, commented on “the genius and productivity" of Rosenstiel. Rosenstiel then saluted UM, Dr. Stanford^ and the faculty and said that the real thanks go to them because they devote their lives to education. Rosenstiel concluded by saying,” To me it has been a wonderful day, and I thank you very much.” President Stanford closed the ceremonies by reading proclamations from Chuck Hail, Mayor of Metropolitan Dade County, and Steven P. Clark, mayor of Miami, naming November 9 “Lewis Rosenstiel Day.” The International Oceanographic Foundation will present its gold medal to Rosenstiel recognizing him as the layman with the greatest contribution, on November 21. The Board of Trustees also named Rosenstiel as the first Distinguished University Associate. Bv JOHN RF.ILI.Y Of Th« Hurried» staff The Student Activity Fee Allocation Committee, responsible for the allocation of student activity fee funds, is now considering fund requests for next year and additional funds for this year from campus organizations. According to William Sheeder, director of the Office of Student Affairs, any organization which provides services to the University or is open to everyone in the University is eligible for SAFAC funds. The petitions for funds can be obtained in S228 and must be back in the Office of Student Affairs by Dec. 1. The student activity fee funds which amount to 1.32 million dollars a year are appropriated to several areas. Category one is sports and student activities, category two is University publications and category three is a 11 student organizations eligible for funds. A new category Is the Rathskeller for which funds have been allocated. There are fixed allocations for Homecoming and Carni Gras. By MARK BERMAN' Of Th« Hurrlc«M Start Some 350 demonstrators peacefully protested President Nixon’s Vietnam War policies Saturday in front of his Key Biscayne Compound The protestors marched from Crandon Park for two miles to the President’s home on Bay Lane carrying signs and American flags and chanting peace slogans. One protestor, Herbert Presslier, president of Young Democrats of Miami Dade Junior College North, was arrested for using profanity. UM was represented by members of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee and the Florida Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. When the protestors reached the President’s home they were told by policemen to keep moving and to march two abreast. They were met by a group of 15 College Republicans and Young Americans For Freedom who held a counter picket on a neighbor’s lawn. "The purpose of the march was to protest President Nixon’s recent speech on the war and the Justice Department’s failure to issue a permit for a November 15 march up Pennsylvania Ave.,” said Peter Yaffe, one of UM’s Moratorium leaders. He saiu tne demonstrators will walk past the White House this week with or without the permit. The student protestors were joined by several citizens and young families. Dorothy Salomon of Miami Continued on Pagrffl Aluminum Screw’ Nails 85 —Photo by PAUL HART The Pietl Piper Lead»« .. . and the “scrcu'ccs" follow By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of TIN Hurrlc*M Start The UM saw its newest honorary In action last Friday as the Order of the Aluminum Screw tapped “screwees” throughout the student body, faculty, and administration. Led by a black robed recorder player, the founding fathers of the AS, decked in what appeared to be somebody’s old kitchen curtains, tripped merrily along to the beat of a tambourine and a garbage can “drum”. Unmolested, they entered classes, offices, and the library, tapping eight-five people In all. “Too many people that were leaders needed to be recognized for their leadership, and because of their involvement in controversial issues and university politics, they were overlooked,” said — USG Vice President and AS co-founder, Marty Weinkle. Tadpees on Friday included Dr. Henry King Stanford who "joyously joined the procession" through the Ashe Building; Dr. Armin Gropp, dean of the faculties; Larry Snyder, Hurricane editor; William Sheeder, director of student activities; Mary Fiksel, editor of Tempo; “Mike”, the sanitation engineer; and many others. “One pf our aims was to tap those women who. Continued on Page 2 '■~=T ■■=—-------------------—----------1------—
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 11, 1969 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1969-11-11 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (10 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_19691111 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19691111 |
Digital ID | MHC_19691111_001 |
Full Text | __ UNIVERSITÀ Of MIAMI Lambda Chi Wins Homecoming Trophym By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of Th« Hurricane start The 1969 winners of Homecoming were announced Saturday night at the Homecoming dance held at the Hotel Americana. , Trophies were awarded for decorations (house decorations, posters and floats) and spirit. “I think that this year’s Homecoming was far superior to any other Homecoming we’ve had here at the university because of the marked increase in participation of the independents, the quality of all the entries in the parade, and all the Executive Committee was able to do because of an increased budget,” said overall Homecoming chairman Doug Quinn. The ‘Overall Independent’ award went to the Mahoney-Pearson Complex and the ‘Overall Fraternity’ Award went to Lambda Chi Alpha. Delta Gamma was the recipient of the ‘Overall Sorority’ aware.. The ‘Overall Homecoming’ trophy for 1969 went to Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. ZBT was first runner up for the trophy while Sigma Chi was second runner up. .. Ibis year's Homecoming was superior lo any other.” '«mirerà Winner of the ‘Homecoming Spirit Trophy’ was Delta Zeta sorority. COISO (the Council of International Student Organizations) was selected as the ‘International Organization Contributing the most to Homecoming’. The award of ‘Best Decorated Car’ was given to Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority. In the area of ‘House Decorations’ Lambda Chi Alpha placed first, and ZBT was second in the fraternity division. Phi Sigma Sigma took first place la the sorority division while Sigma Delta Tau placed second. In the independent category the Mahoney-Pearson Complex captured fi»st place honors, while Apartment No. 41 took second place. Winners of the Poster Contest In the indepe sion was the Mahoney-Pearson Complex, in th „¡.LIBRARY Division it was Delta Zeta, and the fraternity division winner was Tau Epsilon Phi. The next category judged was parade entries that cost over $200 to construct. In this Upper Independent category the first place went to COISO with the Newman Center and the 960 Complex tieing for second.« In the Lower Independent category of floats costing less than $200, the first place award went to the Mahoney-Pearson Complex while the second place award went to the Hurricane Skiers. In the sorority division Alpha Epsilon Phi took first place honors while Delta Gamma and Chi Omega tied for the number two spot. ZBT took the first place award in the upper division fraternity competition and Sigma Chi received the second place award. In the lower division Lambda Chi Alpha was the first . place recipient while Phi Epsilon Pi placed second. Queen Sabine Reigns . . over Homecoming festicitien Drug Report Miami's “Cuban Mafia” is reportedly responsible for most of the illegal drug flow through southern Florida. See page 3 for a complete report. Jazz Concert Jerry Coker will direct the UM Jazz Band tonight in the Beaumont Lecture Hall at 8:30. Turn to page 7 for more details. Voi. 45, No. 16 Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1969 281-4101 Students Travel To D.C. By JOHN REILLY Of Th« Hurried» Start Two hundred UM students will travel to Washington, D.C. tomorrow to take part in the'November Moratorium activities. A c c ording to Peter Yaffe, coordinator of the drive to D. C., all students will go b y car to W ssh ington. Yaffe stressed the point that there is plenty of room for anyone who wants to go. Yaffe said that the group will leave on Wednesday night at 9 p.m. from the Wesley Foundation. He added that people can join the group right up to departing time. Lloyd Tannenbaum, co coordinator of the drive, said that the cars will not travel in a caravan. “Three or four cars at a time will leave,” said Tannenbaum. Yaffe said the committee is asking all students that are going to Washington to bring food staples with them. “Negotiations with Slater’s for free sandwiches and coffee are going on right now,” said Yaffe, “but nothing is definite yet.” He said the group will participate in the “March Against Death,” which starts on Thursday, and Saturday’s mass march, for which a permit has not been issued. Yaffe said the group will participate in the mass march regardless of whether or not a permit is issued. “We feel that this Is a ploy by the Nixon Administration to encourage violence, therefore discrediting the peace movement and scaring people away from Washington,” he said. “This has had the reverse effect and more people are expected than originally,” added Yaffe. "All we can do is hope for no violence,” said Tannenbaum. Anyone interested in the Moratorium activities can stop at the Moratorium table in the Breezeway or call Peter Yaffe at 3082 or Lloyd Tannenbaum at 3662. Love-In Staged On ‘The Rock9 Over 1,000 people were attracted to UM’s second Love-In held on “The Rock” Sunday afternoon. The Love-In, sponsored by the New Party, featured music groups like "The Military Industrial Complex” and “Echo.” Hank Williams, head of the North Miami Beach “love-in gang,” which has staged love-ins at Crandon Park and Coconut Grove, was Invited by the New Party to head the UM edition. The afternoon's activities also included talking about the Moratorium and peace. Planners of the Love-In hope to stage more in the future. f .. Tripoli teas acting without any authorization .. —Jim Yasser USG President “J think USG has lacked direction this year” —Louis Tripoli Ex-Attorney General By SHARA T. PAVLOW Hurricane Exccutiv« Editor In a move surprising to many, USG Attorney General Lou Tripoli was fired, Saturday, by President Jim Yasser when he attempted to call a meeting of the President’s Cabinet on his own authority. The incident arose when Yasser was informed of a press release to the Hurricane announcing the first Cabinet meeting of the year to be held. “That was the first I had heard of any such meeting,” Yasser told the Hurricane. “When I asked him (Tripoli) about it, he said he left a note for me concerning the meeting. I never received any note,” Yasser said. Tripoli claims the Cabinet has been run strictly on the initiative of its individual members and without direction. "I felt that if neither the council nor the Executive would lead student government, the Cabinet should,” he said in defense of his actions. “I don’t feel there has been any direction to student government this year.” According to Tripoli, the meeting was for the purpose of finding out what Cabinet members had accomplished, to make future plans and assignments, and to coordinate a philosophy of student government’s aims for the coming year. If a meeting of the Presidential Cabinet is to be called, the President is the one to call it. Yasser said. “I did no such thing and Tripoli was acting without any authorization in releasing it to the Hurricane,” he said. Yasser made mention of appointing Don Wade, now a presidential assistant to the post, but Wade later denied that anything had been settled. “Jim hasn’t seriously sat down and discussed it with me, so I’m not making any plans,” he said in a believable Kennedy accent. Tripoli later announced his candidacy for the seat of senior class representative to USG Council vacated two weeks ago by Cindy Hill. . SAFAC Petitions Available For Acting 4 Without A uthority> USG President Yasser Fires Attorney General —Photo By ANDRE FESKO Louis Rosenstiel at Dedication Proceedings ... in Miami Marine Stadium Marine Center Enters New Era —Photo By BUZZ BIRNBACH Students Carry Signs, Flags ... to protest tear policy Demonstrators March To Nixons Compound By FRAN TARADASH Of Th« Hurrican* Start UM honored Lewis Rosenstiel and his late wife, Dorothy H. Rosenstiel, at ceremonies at the Marine Stadium Sunday. In recognition of the Rosenstiel gift of $12.2 million to the University, the ceremonies marked the changing of the names of the Marine Institute to the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and the School of Medicine to the Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel Medical Sciences Building. President Stanford opened the ceremonies with these words, “Help us say thank-you to a great friend of the University.” F. G. Walton Smith, Dean of the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, called Rosenstiel “something of a modern oceanographer.” Smith also said that the gift will be a substantial foundation to help UM reach the financial goal set by the Golden Anniversary Development Program which ends in 1975. Dr. W. Dean Warren, Vice-. President for Medical Affairs, said that, “The University of Miami is headed for a rendezvous with greatness.” he also went on to explain the history of the Medical School and its need for financial hacking, and called the Rosenstiel gift “The greatest philanthropic investment made in the State of Florida" and that the gift would provide the “thrust to take UM to that rendezvous with greatness, greatness.” Dean Lewis, of the School of Law, commented on “the genius and productivity" of Rosenstiel. Rosenstiel then saluted UM, Dr. Stanford^ and the faculty and said that the real thanks go to them because they devote their lives to education. Rosenstiel concluded by saying,” To me it has been a wonderful day, and I thank you very much.” President Stanford closed the ceremonies by reading proclamations from Chuck Hail, Mayor of Metropolitan Dade County, and Steven P. Clark, mayor of Miami, naming November 9 “Lewis Rosenstiel Day.” The International Oceanographic Foundation will present its gold medal to Rosenstiel recognizing him as the layman with the greatest contribution, on November 21. The Board of Trustees also named Rosenstiel as the first Distinguished University Associate. Bv JOHN RF.ILI.Y Of Th« Hurried» staff The Student Activity Fee Allocation Committee, responsible for the allocation of student activity fee funds, is now considering fund requests for next year and additional funds for this year from campus organizations. According to William Sheeder, director of the Office of Student Affairs, any organization which provides services to the University or is open to everyone in the University is eligible for SAFAC funds. The petitions for funds can be obtained in S228 and must be back in the Office of Student Affairs by Dec. 1. The student activity fee funds which amount to 1.32 million dollars a year are appropriated to several areas. Category one is sports and student activities, category two is University publications and category three is a 11 student organizations eligible for funds. A new category Is the Rathskeller for which funds have been allocated. There are fixed allocations for Homecoming and Carni Gras. By MARK BERMAN' Of Th« Hurrlc«M Start Some 350 demonstrators peacefully protested President Nixon’s Vietnam War policies Saturday in front of his Key Biscayne Compound The protestors marched from Crandon Park for two miles to the President’s home on Bay Lane carrying signs and American flags and chanting peace slogans. One protestor, Herbert Presslier, president of Young Democrats of Miami Dade Junior College North, was arrested for using profanity. UM was represented by members of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee and the Florida Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. When the protestors reached the President’s home they were told by policemen to keep moving and to march two abreast. They were met by a group of 15 College Republicans and Young Americans For Freedom who held a counter picket on a neighbor’s lawn. "The purpose of the march was to protest President Nixon’s recent speech on the war and the Justice Department’s failure to issue a permit for a November 15 march up Pennsylvania Ave.,” said Peter Yaffe, one of UM’s Moratorium leaders. He saiu tne demonstrators will walk past the White House this week with or without the permit. The student protestors were joined by several citizens and young families. Dorothy Salomon of Miami Continued on Pagrffl Aluminum Screw’ Nails 85 —Photo by PAUL HART The Pietl Piper Lead»« .. . and the “scrcu'ccs" follow By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of TIN Hurrlc*M Start The UM saw its newest honorary In action last Friday as the Order of the Aluminum Screw tapped “screwees” throughout the student body, faculty, and administration. Led by a black robed recorder player, the founding fathers of the AS, decked in what appeared to be somebody’s old kitchen curtains, tripped merrily along to the beat of a tambourine and a garbage can “drum”. Unmolested, they entered classes, offices, and the library, tapping eight-five people In all. “Too many people that were leaders needed to be recognized for their leadership, and because of their involvement in controversial issues and university politics, they were overlooked,” said — USG Vice President and AS co-founder, Marty Weinkle. Tadpees on Friday included Dr. Henry King Stanford who "joyously joined the procession" through the Ashe Building; Dr. Armin Gropp, dean of the faculties; Larry Snyder, Hurricane editor; William Sheeder, director of student activities; Mary Fiksel, editor of Tempo; “Mike”, the sanitation engineer; and many others. “One pf our aims was to tap those women who. Continued on Page 2 '■~=T ■■=—-------------------—----------1------— |
Archive | MHC_19691111_001.tif |
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