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—. ..-.-.. m------i...; m. In the money Looking back Look who’s talking The University’s fund-raising campaign nears its end. News — page 4 I______________ BMBMHMSi ÜMMfflN From Beruit to Beijing, the ’80s was an explosive period. Look back at some of the biggest newsmakers of the decade. Opinion — page 8 ■■H — — — Bad English will close out the concert year tomorrow on I the UC PI. ’laza. Accent■ page 10 ----- Teacher evaluations not printed SG doesn't know who is at fault By ROBERT MILLER Contributing Editor The majority of University of Miami students selected their class schedules during pre-registration for the spring semester without the aid of Faculty Evaluation lists, because this year's Student Government Cabinet failed to get them printed, sources said. According to SG Adviser Dr. Craig Ullom, over 80 percent of the student body has already completed pre-registration for the spring, and he said it is a little late for the evaluations to be printed now. "As far as I know, they I the faculty evaluations] were forgotten," SG Executive Secretary Irwin Raij said. Raij said the SG Cabinet committee normally responsible for the evaluations did nothing this fall to provide students with the lists in time for spring registration. Raij said the Academic Affairs Committee has been without a chairperson since the beginning of the semester, and consequently has not been able to accomplish much this semester. Raij said the person he recommended for the chair rescued Ik-fore the semester began for personal reasons. Raij added that the committee has not had a leader since then because SG President Troy Bell did not appoint anyone. Bell denied the committee has been without leadership, explaining that he appointed Golnar Ajwani to the post two weeks ago. However, the minutes of the last cabinet meeting, held Monday, do not list anyone under the title of the Academic .Affairs Committee chairperson. Teesta Sisodia, SG vice president, said because the chairperson is newly appointed, there has not been time for the person to see to the evaluations’ production. Sisodia added that Kevin Ferber, secretary of organizational affairs, Please see pauePiV ACL’LTY Getting it in Hurricane basketball center Joe Wylie scored 31 points during Monday's game against the University of Maryland-Baltimore County. See results, page 12. Elections results still not released Supreme Court to hear appeals By TOM B. HIGGINS Assistant News Editor The results of the University of Miami Student Government elections held last month were again postponed because the SG Supreme Court could not reach quorum for an appeals hearing scheduled Wednesday evening. Chief Justice Michael Tyler said the hearing has been rescheduled and will be held at 5 p.m. today. Wednesday was the second time the court was forced to postpone a hearing for the same set of appeals. It had originally planned to hold the hearing on Nov. 21. The court was scheduled to hear appeals to decisions made at the Nov. 17 Elections Commission hearing and earlier commission rulings. Tyler said three of the justices could not show up due to class commitments. "1 am aware that there is a problem with absenteeism,” Tyler added. "A solution is being looked into." Elections Commission Chairperson Mark Chiappone expressed his frustration with the latest postponement. “I’m getting fed up here," he said. “I don’t know how many stu- Tm basically handcuffed. I can’t imagine how the candidates feel, much less the students.’ Mark Chiappone, Elections Commission chairperson when the elections results will be released." Chiappone added that SG adviser Craig Ullom and Lloyd Burrows, elections commission adviser, have told him not to release the vote results until all questions surrounding the elections have been answered “I'm basically handcuffed," Chiappone continued. "1 can't imagine how the candidates feel, much less the students." Nineteen SG positions, including senate seats and voting membership in SG Productions, were on the election ballot, which listed almost 40 candidates. At the Nov. 17 commission hearing, the Integrity ticket was disqualified for a second time as a result of a complaint presented bv S<, Construction to begin on architecture tower From Staff Repcr!s On Monday the University of Miami will hoid a ground-breaking ceremony to celebrate the construction of the Ziff tower. The ceremony will be held at 4 p.m. in the courtyard of the School of Architecture. The tower will be the first building of a new School of Architecture complex designed by Italian architect Aldo Rossi. The new School of Architecture complex will be the first American project for Rossi, an internationally known architect and architectual theoretician, who will be in attendance Monday. Lyn Parks, development officer for the School of Architecture, -aid of Rossi, “To have someone of his stature is a real coup." The groundbreaking will honor Dr. Sanford Ziff and his family, who have donated $1 million toward construction of the 100-t'oot tower, which will contain lecture and exhibition rooms. According to Parks, no completion date has been set for the complex, and much fund raising is yet to be done. ABT ARRESTS AT ORANGE BOWL Sept. 16 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Nov. 4 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Underage drinking arrests increase MICHAEL MORRIS iGraphics Editor By MAUREEN McDERMOTT insight Editor Officials from the Florida Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco arrested 31 underage drinkers at Saturday's football game between University of Miami and Notre Dame — more than any other game this season. However, ABT Captain Thomas Wheeler said the total number of arrests for this fall's six home games is 91, down from last season. "If they are drinking." Wheeler said of the underaged fans, “they are disguising it better. Wheeler said that arrests for the Miami-No-tre Dame matchup were divided evenly between UM students, Notre Dame students and local community college students. He added that Sat- urday’s arrests included two minors selling beer at concession stands and one underaged person selling beer outside the stadium. ABT started checking for identification on Orange Bowl property last season. After the first home game this season,Wheeler said the .ABT decided to start checking within a five-block radius of the stadium, targeting yard parties and people drinking in parked cars. Wheeler said six to eight plain-clothed officers worked the previous games this season, however, ABT had 20 officers work the Notre Dame game because of the sellout crowd. Wheeler said many more people were checked than arrested. People who are arre-ted for underage drinking who have a valid local ID or attend school in the area are released on their promise to appear in court. Arrestees without identification are detained until someone vouches for them. The penalty for the misdemeanor of underaged drinking, on the first offense, ranges from case dismissal to the maximum of 60 days in jail with a $500 fine and suspension of a student's driver’s license for six months. Those arrested with false Florida indentifica-tion may face a maximum penalty of live years in state prison, a $5,000 fine and possible revocation of their driver's license. Also new this year is a strengthened ABT traveling squad. The squad attended homecoming games at the University of Florida, Florida State University, Florida A&M University and the University of Central Florida. INSIDE SPORTS • With Miami’s 27-10 victory over Notre Dame, the Hurricanes are back in the national championship hunt. Page 12 • Sugar Bowl Tickets are going fast at $30 each Find out when and where to pick up passes. Page 12 • Miami w* play either Alabama or Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl. Miami is ranked everywhere from first to fifth in a number of po#s as the rating game continues Hurricanes bound for Sugar Bowl By CHRISTOPHER J. RINGS Sports Editor The University of Miami will compete for its third national football championship of the decade Jan. 1 in the Superdome in New Orleans. The Hurricanes (10-1) accepted an official USF&G Sugar Bowl bid after knocking off Notre Dame, the nation’s No.l-ranked team, -10 Saturday. 27-1 ‘ We're excited about having Miami, with their flamboyant, high-flying offense and their free-wheeling defense," said Sugar Bowl Committee Chairman James Flower. The Hurricanes, national champions in 1983 and 1987, Year's Day bowl for the seventh consecutive year. The Hurricanes' Sugar Bowl host, traditionally the Southeastern Conference champion, will be either Alabama (10-0), which will finish the season undefeated and ranked second with a win over Auburn (9-2) tomorrow, or Tennessee (10-1), which could receive the bid if Alabama loses. The Fighting Irish (11-1) accepted an official invitation to the Federal Express Orange Bowl Classic before game time. Notre Dame will face the Big-Eight Conference champion, top-ranked Colorado (11-0). For the first time since the 1985 season, the national champion will not be decided by just one bowl game. This year's field
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, December 01, 1989 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1989-12-01 |
Coverage Temporal | 1980-1989 |
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_19891201 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19891201 |
Digital ID | MHC_19891201_001 |
Full Text | —. ..-.-.. m------i...; m. In the money Looking back Look who’s talking The University’s fund-raising campaign nears its end. News — page 4 I______________ BMBMHMSi ÜMMfflN From Beruit to Beijing, the ’80s was an explosive period. Look back at some of the biggest newsmakers of the decade. Opinion — page 8 ■■H — — — Bad English will close out the concert year tomorrow on I the UC PI. ’laza. Accent■ page 10 ----- Teacher evaluations not printed SG doesn't know who is at fault By ROBERT MILLER Contributing Editor The majority of University of Miami students selected their class schedules during pre-registration for the spring semester without the aid of Faculty Evaluation lists, because this year's Student Government Cabinet failed to get them printed, sources said. According to SG Adviser Dr. Craig Ullom, over 80 percent of the student body has already completed pre-registration for the spring, and he said it is a little late for the evaluations to be printed now. "As far as I know, they I the faculty evaluations] were forgotten," SG Executive Secretary Irwin Raij said. Raij said the SG Cabinet committee normally responsible for the evaluations did nothing this fall to provide students with the lists in time for spring registration. Raij said the Academic Affairs Committee has been without a chairperson since the beginning of the semester, and consequently has not been able to accomplish much this semester. Raij said the person he recommended for the chair rescued Ik-fore the semester began for personal reasons. Raij added that the committee has not had a leader since then because SG President Troy Bell did not appoint anyone. Bell denied the committee has been without leadership, explaining that he appointed Golnar Ajwani to the post two weeks ago. However, the minutes of the last cabinet meeting, held Monday, do not list anyone under the title of the Academic .Affairs Committee chairperson. Teesta Sisodia, SG vice president, said because the chairperson is newly appointed, there has not been time for the person to see to the evaluations’ production. Sisodia added that Kevin Ferber, secretary of organizational affairs, Please see pauePiV ACL’LTY Getting it in Hurricane basketball center Joe Wylie scored 31 points during Monday's game against the University of Maryland-Baltimore County. See results, page 12. Elections results still not released Supreme Court to hear appeals By TOM B. HIGGINS Assistant News Editor The results of the University of Miami Student Government elections held last month were again postponed because the SG Supreme Court could not reach quorum for an appeals hearing scheduled Wednesday evening. Chief Justice Michael Tyler said the hearing has been rescheduled and will be held at 5 p.m. today. Wednesday was the second time the court was forced to postpone a hearing for the same set of appeals. It had originally planned to hold the hearing on Nov. 21. The court was scheduled to hear appeals to decisions made at the Nov. 17 Elections Commission hearing and earlier commission rulings. Tyler said three of the justices could not show up due to class commitments. "1 am aware that there is a problem with absenteeism,” Tyler added. "A solution is being looked into." Elections Commission Chairperson Mark Chiappone expressed his frustration with the latest postponement. “I’m getting fed up here," he said. “I don’t know how many stu- Tm basically handcuffed. I can’t imagine how the candidates feel, much less the students.’ Mark Chiappone, Elections Commission chairperson when the elections results will be released." Chiappone added that SG adviser Craig Ullom and Lloyd Burrows, elections commission adviser, have told him not to release the vote results until all questions surrounding the elections have been answered “I'm basically handcuffed," Chiappone continued. "1 can't imagine how the candidates feel, much less the students." Nineteen SG positions, including senate seats and voting membership in SG Productions, were on the election ballot, which listed almost 40 candidates. At the Nov. 17 commission hearing, the Integrity ticket was disqualified for a second time as a result of a complaint presented bv S<, Construction to begin on architecture tower From Staff Repcr!s On Monday the University of Miami will hoid a ground-breaking ceremony to celebrate the construction of the Ziff tower. The ceremony will be held at 4 p.m. in the courtyard of the School of Architecture. The tower will be the first building of a new School of Architecture complex designed by Italian architect Aldo Rossi. The new School of Architecture complex will be the first American project for Rossi, an internationally known architect and architectual theoretician, who will be in attendance Monday. Lyn Parks, development officer for the School of Architecture, -aid of Rossi, “To have someone of his stature is a real coup." The groundbreaking will honor Dr. Sanford Ziff and his family, who have donated $1 million toward construction of the 100-t'oot tower, which will contain lecture and exhibition rooms. According to Parks, no completion date has been set for the complex, and much fund raising is yet to be done. ABT ARRESTS AT ORANGE BOWL Sept. 16 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Nov. 4 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Underage drinking arrests increase MICHAEL MORRIS iGraphics Editor By MAUREEN McDERMOTT insight Editor Officials from the Florida Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco arrested 31 underage drinkers at Saturday's football game between University of Miami and Notre Dame — more than any other game this season. However, ABT Captain Thomas Wheeler said the total number of arrests for this fall's six home games is 91, down from last season. "If they are drinking." Wheeler said of the underaged fans, “they are disguising it better. Wheeler said that arrests for the Miami-No-tre Dame matchup were divided evenly between UM students, Notre Dame students and local community college students. He added that Sat- urday’s arrests included two minors selling beer at concession stands and one underaged person selling beer outside the stadium. ABT started checking for identification on Orange Bowl property last season. After the first home game this season,Wheeler said the .ABT decided to start checking within a five-block radius of the stadium, targeting yard parties and people drinking in parked cars. Wheeler said six to eight plain-clothed officers worked the previous games this season, however, ABT had 20 officers work the Notre Dame game because of the sellout crowd. Wheeler said many more people were checked than arrested. People who are arre-ted for underage drinking who have a valid local ID or attend school in the area are released on their promise to appear in court. Arrestees without identification are detained until someone vouches for them. The penalty for the misdemeanor of underaged drinking, on the first offense, ranges from case dismissal to the maximum of 60 days in jail with a $500 fine and suspension of a student's driver’s license for six months. Those arrested with false Florida indentifica-tion may face a maximum penalty of live years in state prison, a $5,000 fine and possible revocation of their driver's license. Also new this year is a strengthened ABT traveling squad. The squad attended homecoming games at the University of Florida, Florida State University, Florida A&M University and the University of Central Florida. INSIDE SPORTS • With Miami’s 27-10 victory over Notre Dame, the Hurricanes are back in the national championship hunt. Page 12 • Sugar Bowl Tickets are going fast at $30 each Find out when and where to pick up passes. Page 12 • Miami w* play either Alabama or Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl. Miami is ranked everywhere from first to fifth in a number of po#s as the rating game continues Hurricanes bound for Sugar Bowl By CHRISTOPHER J. RINGS Sports Editor The University of Miami will compete for its third national football championship of the decade Jan. 1 in the Superdome in New Orleans. The Hurricanes (10-1) accepted an official USF&G Sugar Bowl bid after knocking off Notre Dame, the nation’s No.l-ranked team, -10 Saturday. 27-1 ‘ We're excited about having Miami, with their flamboyant, high-flying offense and their free-wheeling defense," said Sugar Bowl Committee Chairman James Flower. The Hurricanes, national champions in 1983 and 1987, Year's Day bowl for the seventh consecutive year. The Hurricanes' Sugar Bowl host, traditionally the Southeastern Conference champion, will be either Alabama (10-0), which will finish the season undefeated and ranked second with a win over Auburn (9-2) tomorrow, or Tennessee (10-1), which could receive the bid if Alabama loses. The Fighting Irish (11-1) accepted an official invitation to the Federal Express Orange Bowl Classic before game time. Notre Dame will face the Big-Eight Conference champion, top-ranked Colorado (11-0). For the first time since the 1985 season, the national champion will not be decided by just one bowl game. This year's field |
Archive | MHC_19891201_001.tif |
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