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THE MIAMI W HURRICANE Vm. XIX_____Coral Gables, Florida, November 17, 1944 No. 2 Photo by Art Laskey The Hurricane camera catches Passing Attack May Mean Hurricane Victory Tonight Threatening to take to the air with long passes, a University of Miami football team which has tasted paydirt only once in five games, will meet its most vulnerable foe of the season, little Presbyterian college, tonight at the Orange Bowl. Coach Eddie Dunn devoted Wednesday workouts to pass plays and had linemen drilling in pass protection. Panhellenic Invites Rnshees Second week of rushing will begin Monday when Chi Omega and Kappa Kappa Gamma give their informal theme parties from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Elizabeth Sloan, assistant dean of women, requests that rushees go to her office, 106A Administration building, every day beginning today through Rush Week to obtain invitations to the parties. Tuesday from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Alpha Epsilon Phi and Zeta Tau Alpha will entertain. Delta Phi Epsilon, Delta Zeta, and Sigma Kappa will have their parties Wednesday from 4 to 6:30 p.m. No parties will be held Thursday. Preferential teas will be held Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. All of the above sorority functions are by invitation only. Aicheiy Club To Hold Shoot Archery club members elected new officers at its first meeting of the new trimester Monday. They are: Edgar E. Getsee, president; Barbara Rinehimer, secretary; Frances Anderson, treasurer; Iris Postlewaite, property manager; and Lee Carpenter, publicity. Coman Leonard is in charge of a turkey shoot which will award a turkey to the most accurate marksman. The shoot will be held on the archery range across from the University before the Thanksgiving holiday. Rita Meersman is working with Coman on plans for the competition. Meetings of the archery club will be held on Mondays at 12:45 p.m. in room 329. An entrance fee of $1.00 is charged new members and dues are 50 cents per month. Catholics Invited To Attend Picnic A picnic to be held at Matheson Hammock, Sunday, will begin the Newman club’s social calendar for this trimester. . A school bus will leave the Slop Shop at 1:30 p.m. for the picnic. President Francis Conlon announ-c«s that refreshments and games will be plentiful, and that all Catholic students are invited to attend. The next meeting of the club be held Monday, Nov. 20, at «:45 p.m. in room 322. three bedinked freshmen co-eds being taught to button as interested upperclassmen look on. 43 To Wear MBS Ribbons Victor Emanuel, presidert of Mu Beta Sigma, honorary biological society, has announced the pledging of forty-three students. Of the forty-three, nine are senior pledges. They are Monroe Birdsey, Bill Wyson, Ed Mickler, A. Cormier, Lester Gordon, Geraldine Carpenter, Dan Benham, Elliot B. Wallman, and Helen Montgomery. Those pledges who wish to become associate members are Sherman Ellis, Robert Swimmer, Donald Carey, Shirley Goldstein, Paul Silverman, Beatrice Gins-burg. Anita Rees, Roslyn Kivel, Carl Thompson, Frances Jahn, Francine Newman, William Boyle, and Morrill Goddard, Jr. Also chosen as associate member pledges are: Bernard Bowker, Charlotte Black, Norma Wether-horn. Edith Cohen, Libby Arkin, Betty Brower, Louise Tale, Ocenia Smith, Samuel Soldinger, Harry Kleir., Dorothy V. Birnbaum, Thelma Goldfield, Marian Cohen, Shirley Wein, Alice Olmstead, Stanley Silverman, George L. See, Nicki Tolstoi and Ardyse Magner. Next meeting will be held Tuesday at 12:45 p.m. Victor has announced that all students are invited to attend. National Sec'y Works With Y Beginning this trimester the University will have a trained YMCA national secretary to work with the group on campus. He is Mr. Ed Rydman, who comes to the University from the YMCA in Brooklyn. Mr. Rydman majored in group work in the school of social administration at Ohio State, and studied personnel administration at Teachers college, Columbia university. His duties here will include the organization of a Y.M.C.A. branch in Coral Gables. At present he has a Y.M.C.A. swimming club for high school boys and girls at the Venetian pool. He has stated that he plans to organize clubs for children of the elementary schools in Coral Gables. Thanksgiving Holiday Moans No School Thursday “Lot’s talk turkey" so the saying goes and that is exactly wkat the Hurricane staff plans to do Thursday. No professors will appear for classes, but if you are the braia-type, coma ahead. People won’t always agree on the date for Thanksgiving, but they will agree it is fine having a holiday. FroshToChoose Officers In Two Elections Candidates nominated for the freshman offices at the class meeting Wednesday were so numerous that Dick Farrior, student body president, has had to schedule two election days. Primary elections will be held Monday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in front of the theater. Run-off elections will be held Wednesday, 12:45 p.m. in the theater. Nominated for the position of class president are: Sam Martin, Stanley Silverman, Paul Skelton, James Matthews, Bob High, Melvin Starr, and Leonard Kaplan. Vice presidential candidates are; Mary Elizabeth Orr, Don Hassler, Dick Rice, Bob Harrell, Marilyn Mundy, Shirley Raible, Charlie Meserve, Lindy Land, Dick Baker, Stanley Worris, and Elliot Warman. Vying for the position of secretary will be: Hope Tannen-baum, Hannah Rosenblatt, Annette Jones, Jean Rasco, Virginia Irwin, Lila Gershkin, Laura Mc-Cawley, Abe Salzman, and Peggy O’Brien. Candidates for the position of treasurer are: Eleanor McConnell, Irene Jacobs, Arty Barron, Melvin Michaels, Lila Zeiphlen, Nannette Veerhoeff, Marian Hasty, Betty Henderson, Connie Ehrenburg, Ruth Bockenek, George See, and Harold Winters. Senatorial candidates are: Don Gray, John Eldry, Mary Knight Tyler, Bill Avery, Mary Elizabeth Orr, Eleanor McConnell, Gus Harrison, Bob Crumley, Sue Barbour, Archie Gorden, Julian Patrick, Dolores Scholstay, Albert Knapp, Tula Carter, Jim Lipscomb, Marty Smolens, Buddy Steinbaum, Gloria Patterson, Elsie Gray, Leonard Silver, James Matthews, Minnie Conolon, Sylvan Marler, Frank Howard, Paul Silverman, Gene Hancock, Rosemary Hennington, Marvin Purfet, and Harold Winters. Corp. Patton Dies In Italy Corp. Edward L. Patton, former University student, has been reported killed in action Oct. 10 while on active duty in Italy. Attached to an infantry unit, Corp. Patton was previously reported missing in action. Before entering the Army in 1943, Corp. Patton was a student here, president of the junior class and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Patton, 1960 N. W. 24th ct. Among his survivors are his wife, Mrs. Wilma Patton, Washington, D.C.; three brothers, D. O., jr., Stuart, and Melvin. Ibis Meeting Called Students interested in any type of Ibis yearbook work have been requested to meet Tuesday, 1 p.m., room 337, to talk with Simon Hochberger, publications advisor. Ball handling, which has been shoddy in previous eeitests, has been worked on to the point where deception can be counted on to help the Hurricanes in the pursuit of their first victory. Strengthening the end positions, Dunn has moved speedy A1 Hudson, 170-pound freshman, to the flank. Hudson is a good receiver and his extraordinary speed, which he was not able to show as a halfback, will help in picking up important extra yardage. Dick Glover, an untried 160-pound halfback, has been showing up well in the passing department and should see some action. Dunn is standing pat on his opening line-up, using the same backfield quartet that did most of the work against North Carolina State last week. Wylie, Mul-lis, Brown, and Watt will start. Joe Bartemus continues to nose out Vince Pinckney for the top berth at right guard. Bartemus, not eligible until the Wake Forest game, started the last two games but has given way to Pinckney most of the time. Out with an injury last week, Dick Trathen, center, will probably start against the Blue Stockings. He got into scrimmage Wednesday and showed no bad results from the layoff. Presbyterian’s offense, which has garnered 27 points against six opponents, is built mainly on speed. The T formation taught by Coach Lonnie McMillan, is run by a starting backfield which averages only 150 pounds. Experience is also lacking in the visitor’s squad. (Continued on Page 5) LL Kendall Reported Dead Lt. Jack Kendall, previously reported by the Hurricane to be missing in action, has been officially reported to be dead. A student at the University from 1939 to 1942, Lt. Kendall was Hurricane sports editor and a member of Pi Chi fraternity. Yoong To Lead Junior Clan A deadlock for the junior class presidency which was reached last trimester was broken at a meeting of the class on Wednesday. Gwen Young was elected president. Other officers are: Mark Brown, vice president; Jack Feinstein, secretary; and Frances Anderson, treasurer. Senators are: John (Harlow, Genevieve Lynch, and Gwen Young. French Club Plans Luncheon President Larry Kornblith has announced that the first meeting of Cercle Français will be held in the form of a luncheon Tuesday, Nov.,21, at noon in the San Sébastian restaurant. Following lunch, a short organizational and business meeting will be held. Language professors Dr. Dismukes, Mr. Muller, and Mr. Hiribame will attend. Larry invites all students of French to attend. New Who's Who Names Sixteen Sixteen University students have been selected for Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges for 1944-1945. Who’s Who is an annual publication giving biographies of outstanding university and college stndents. Women selected from the University for this year are Mrs. Frances K. Biro, Barbara Browne, Martha Fahnestock, Vivian Feld, Evelyn Johnson, Josephine Mool, Grace Wilbur, and Muriel Smith. Men who have received this honor are John Rees Harlow, John F. Lowe Jr., Zerney Barnes, Richard Farrior, Alan Fauquher, Clyde Frazier, Roland Kohen and Robert A. Shashy. Rita Grossman and Prince Brigham, nominated last year, will also be included in this year’s book. Grossman Wins Scholarship Rita Grossman, former Hurricane editor and October graduate, will leave tomorrow for Northwestern university to enter the Medill School of Journalism as the winner of a graduate scholarship. She will begin work on her master’s degree in preparation for newspaper work or magazine work. Rita is the co-author of two children’s books being published by Glade House, Inc., “Fish I Have Met — and Et” and “The Adventures of Salty Sam/' Rita was graduated from the University with a bachelor of arts degree, majoring in journalism and minoring in economics. While a student here, she was president of Nu Kappa Tau, member of Who’s Who Among Students of American Universities and Colleges, president of her sorority, president of Lead and Ink honorary journalism fraternity, junior host, managing editor of the Ibis and vice president of the Florida Intercollegiate Press association. IRC To Begin Fall Drive Membership drive for the International Relations club will begin Monday 12 to 1:30 p.m. in the Slop Shop. First meeting of the club will be held November 29, 7:30 p.m., room 333. Dr. Louis K. Manley, professor of government, will be the guest speaker. The International Relations club holds semi-monthly meetings. Talks by guest speakers are usually featured at one, while student roundtable discussions are held at the other. The club works as a part of the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, which furnishes the club with recent books on world affairs and fortnightly summaries of news events.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 17, 1944 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1944-11-17 |
Coverage Temporal | 1940-1949 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (6 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_19441117 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19441117 |
Digital ID | MHC_19441117_001 |
Full Text | THE MIAMI W HURRICANE Vm. XIX_____Coral Gables, Florida, November 17, 1944 No. 2 Photo by Art Laskey The Hurricane camera catches Passing Attack May Mean Hurricane Victory Tonight Threatening to take to the air with long passes, a University of Miami football team which has tasted paydirt only once in five games, will meet its most vulnerable foe of the season, little Presbyterian college, tonight at the Orange Bowl. Coach Eddie Dunn devoted Wednesday workouts to pass plays and had linemen drilling in pass protection. Panhellenic Invites Rnshees Second week of rushing will begin Monday when Chi Omega and Kappa Kappa Gamma give their informal theme parties from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Elizabeth Sloan, assistant dean of women, requests that rushees go to her office, 106A Administration building, every day beginning today through Rush Week to obtain invitations to the parties. Tuesday from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Alpha Epsilon Phi and Zeta Tau Alpha will entertain. Delta Phi Epsilon, Delta Zeta, and Sigma Kappa will have their parties Wednesday from 4 to 6:30 p.m. No parties will be held Thursday. Preferential teas will be held Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. All of the above sorority functions are by invitation only. Aicheiy Club To Hold Shoot Archery club members elected new officers at its first meeting of the new trimester Monday. They are: Edgar E. Getsee, president; Barbara Rinehimer, secretary; Frances Anderson, treasurer; Iris Postlewaite, property manager; and Lee Carpenter, publicity. Coman Leonard is in charge of a turkey shoot which will award a turkey to the most accurate marksman. The shoot will be held on the archery range across from the University before the Thanksgiving holiday. Rita Meersman is working with Coman on plans for the competition. Meetings of the archery club will be held on Mondays at 12:45 p.m. in room 329. An entrance fee of $1.00 is charged new members and dues are 50 cents per month. Catholics Invited To Attend Picnic A picnic to be held at Matheson Hammock, Sunday, will begin the Newman club’s social calendar for this trimester. . A school bus will leave the Slop Shop at 1:30 p.m. for the picnic. President Francis Conlon announ-c«s that refreshments and games will be plentiful, and that all Catholic students are invited to attend. The next meeting of the club be held Monday, Nov. 20, at «:45 p.m. in room 322. three bedinked freshmen co-eds being taught to button as interested upperclassmen look on. 43 To Wear MBS Ribbons Victor Emanuel, presidert of Mu Beta Sigma, honorary biological society, has announced the pledging of forty-three students. Of the forty-three, nine are senior pledges. They are Monroe Birdsey, Bill Wyson, Ed Mickler, A. Cormier, Lester Gordon, Geraldine Carpenter, Dan Benham, Elliot B. Wallman, and Helen Montgomery. Those pledges who wish to become associate members are Sherman Ellis, Robert Swimmer, Donald Carey, Shirley Goldstein, Paul Silverman, Beatrice Gins-burg. Anita Rees, Roslyn Kivel, Carl Thompson, Frances Jahn, Francine Newman, William Boyle, and Morrill Goddard, Jr. Also chosen as associate member pledges are: Bernard Bowker, Charlotte Black, Norma Wether-horn. Edith Cohen, Libby Arkin, Betty Brower, Louise Tale, Ocenia Smith, Samuel Soldinger, Harry Kleir., Dorothy V. Birnbaum, Thelma Goldfield, Marian Cohen, Shirley Wein, Alice Olmstead, Stanley Silverman, George L. See, Nicki Tolstoi and Ardyse Magner. Next meeting will be held Tuesday at 12:45 p.m. Victor has announced that all students are invited to attend. National Sec'y Works With Y Beginning this trimester the University will have a trained YMCA national secretary to work with the group on campus. He is Mr. Ed Rydman, who comes to the University from the YMCA in Brooklyn. Mr. Rydman majored in group work in the school of social administration at Ohio State, and studied personnel administration at Teachers college, Columbia university. His duties here will include the organization of a Y.M.C.A. branch in Coral Gables. At present he has a Y.M.C.A. swimming club for high school boys and girls at the Venetian pool. He has stated that he plans to organize clubs for children of the elementary schools in Coral Gables. Thanksgiving Holiday Moans No School Thursday “Lot’s talk turkey" so the saying goes and that is exactly wkat the Hurricane staff plans to do Thursday. No professors will appear for classes, but if you are the braia-type, coma ahead. People won’t always agree on the date for Thanksgiving, but they will agree it is fine having a holiday. FroshToChoose Officers In Two Elections Candidates nominated for the freshman offices at the class meeting Wednesday were so numerous that Dick Farrior, student body president, has had to schedule two election days. Primary elections will be held Monday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in front of the theater. Run-off elections will be held Wednesday, 12:45 p.m. in the theater. Nominated for the position of class president are: Sam Martin, Stanley Silverman, Paul Skelton, James Matthews, Bob High, Melvin Starr, and Leonard Kaplan. Vice presidential candidates are; Mary Elizabeth Orr, Don Hassler, Dick Rice, Bob Harrell, Marilyn Mundy, Shirley Raible, Charlie Meserve, Lindy Land, Dick Baker, Stanley Worris, and Elliot Warman. Vying for the position of secretary will be: Hope Tannen-baum, Hannah Rosenblatt, Annette Jones, Jean Rasco, Virginia Irwin, Lila Gershkin, Laura Mc-Cawley, Abe Salzman, and Peggy O’Brien. Candidates for the position of treasurer are: Eleanor McConnell, Irene Jacobs, Arty Barron, Melvin Michaels, Lila Zeiphlen, Nannette Veerhoeff, Marian Hasty, Betty Henderson, Connie Ehrenburg, Ruth Bockenek, George See, and Harold Winters. Senatorial candidates are: Don Gray, John Eldry, Mary Knight Tyler, Bill Avery, Mary Elizabeth Orr, Eleanor McConnell, Gus Harrison, Bob Crumley, Sue Barbour, Archie Gorden, Julian Patrick, Dolores Scholstay, Albert Knapp, Tula Carter, Jim Lipscomb, Marty Smolens, Buddy Steinbaum, Gloria Patterson, Elsie Gray, Leonard Silver, James Matthews, Minnie Conolon, Sylvan Marler, Frank Howard, Paul Silverman, Gene Hancock, Rosemary Hennington, Marvin Purfet, and Harold Winters. Corp. Patton Dies In Italy Corp. Edward L. Patton, former University student, has been reported killed in action Oct. 10 while on active duty in Italy. Attached to an infantry unit, Corp. Patton was previously reported missing in action. Before entering the Army in 1943, Corp. Patton was a student here, president of the junior class and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Patton, 1960 N. W. 24th ct. Among his survivors are his wife, Mrs. Wilma Patton, Washington, D.C.; three brothers, D. O., jr., Stuart, and Melvin. Ibis Meeting Called Students interested in any type of Ibis yearbook work have been requested to meet Tuesday, 1 p.m., room 337, to talk with Simon Hochberger, publications advisor. Ball handling, which has been shoddy in previous eeitests, has been worked on to the point where deception can be counted on to help the Hurricanes in the pursuit of their first victory. Strengthening the end positions, Dunn has moved speedy A1 Hudson, 170-pound freshman, to the flank. Hudson is a good receiver and his extraordinary speed, which he was not able to show as a halfback, will help in picking up important extra yardage. Dick Glover, an untried 160-pound halfback, has been showing up well in the passing department and should see some action. Dunn is standing pat on his opening line-up, using the same backfield quartet that did most of the work against North Carolina State last week. Wylie, Mul-lis, Brown, and Watt will start. Joe Bartemus continues to nose out Vince Pinckney for the top berth at right guard. Bartemus, not eligible until the Wake Forest game, started the last two games but has given way to Pinckney most of the time. Out with an injury last week, Dick Trathen, center, will probably start against the Blue Stockings. He got into scrimmage Wednesday and showed no bad results from the layoff. Presbyterian’s offense, which has garnered 27 points against six opponents, is built mainly on speed. The T formation taught by Coach Lonnie McMillan, is run by a starting backfield which averages only 150 pounds. Experience is also lacking in the visitor’s squad. (Continued on Page 5) LL Kendall Reported Dead Lt. Jack Kendall, previously reported by the Hurricane to be missing in action, has been officially reported to be dead. A student at the University from 1939 to 1942, Lt. Kendall was Hurricane sports editor and a member of Pi Chi fraternity. Yoong To Lead Junior Clan A deadlock for the junior class presidency which was reached last trimester was broken at a meeting of the class on Wednesday. Gwen Young was elected president. Other officers are: Mark Brown, vice president; Jack Feinstein, secretary; and Frances Anderson, treasurer. Senators are: John (Harlow, Genevieve Lynch, and Gwen Young. French Club Plans Luncheon President Larry Kornblith has announced that the first meeting of Cercle Français will be held in the form of a luncheon Tuesday, Nov.,21, at noon in the San Sébastian restaurant. Following lunch, a short organizational and business meeting will be held. Language professors Dr. Dismukes, Mr. Muller, and Mr. Hiribame will attend. Larry invites all students of French to attend. New Who's Who Names Sixteen Sixteen University students have been selected for Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges for 1944-1945. Who’s Who is an annual publication giving biographies of outstanding university and college stndents. Women selected from the University for this year are Mrs. Frances K. Biro, Barbara Browne, Martha Fahnestock, Vivian Feld, Evelyn Johnson, Josephine Mool, Grace Wilbur, and Muriel Smith. Men who have received this honor are John Rees Harlow, John F. Lowe Jr., Zerney Barnes, Richard Farrior, Alan Fauquher, Clyde Frazier, Roland Kohen and Robert A. Shashy. Rita Grossman and Prince Brigham, nominated last year, will also be included in this year’s book. Grossman Wins Scholarship Rita Grossman, former Hurricane editor and October graduate, will leave tomorrow for Northwestern university to enter the Medill School of Journalism as the winner of a graduate scholarship. She will begin work on her master’s degree in preparation for newspaper work or magazine work. Rita is the co-author of two children’s books being published by Glade House, Inc., “Fish I Have Met — and Et” and “The Adventures of Salty Sam/' Rita was graduated from the University with a bachelor of arts degree, majoring in journalism and minoring in economics. While a student here, she was president of Nu Kappa Tau, member of Who’s Who Among Students of American Universities and Colleges, president of her sorority, president of Lead and Ink honorary journalism fraternity, junior host, managing editor of the Ibis and vice president of the Florida Intercollegiate Press association. IRC To Begin Fall Drive Membership drive for the International Relations club will begin Monday 12 to 1:30 p.m. in the Slop Shop. First meeting of the club will be held November 29, 7:30 p.m., room 333. Dr. Louis K. Manley, professor of government, will be the guest speaker. The International Relations club holds semi-monthly meetings. Talks by guest speakers are usually featured at one, while student roundtable discussions are held at the other. The club works as a part of the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, which furnishes the club with recent books on world affairs and fortnightly summaries of news events. |
Archive | MHC_19441117_001.tif |
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