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- r • \ - Talent SecuredForReJ Cross DanceThursday mpus Dono rsAwaitB loodwago n ¡’O.K. I; Unit Anives April 15 Hood donations for use in uv-(jrea overseas may be made ky students of the University Of Miami Thursday; April 15, when, tks County’s Blood-Bank unit M>ti to Coral Gables. Registra-tiM of volunteers to give blood (or Military wounded will be contacted on Thursday and Friday fr«B 12 to 2 at the War Council tooth in the patio. . Volunteer blood-donors trill be accepted between the ages of 18 aad «0. All students who volunteer for the service must obtain mitten consent of parents. Those •ho have had serious illnesses within the last year or have ever offered from tuberculosis or ■tfDpex should inform attend-jag doctors. Only those with hMsogiobin over 80 are accepted. ftoe required for giving blood k »bout five minutes. No pain is •ttsehed to the actual operation tnd no weakness follows. Students who expect to give blood not eat for four hours be- fore appearing at the Blood-Bank mit Black coffee, with no sugar « cream, may be taken, but no ■ofid food is permissible. The Blood-Bank unit will appear on campus during the day Thinday to accommodate student nprtrants, and from 5:00 in the evening on will be located at the Coral Gables casualty station for fre Convenience of local citizen ».—DAL SiMte Votes Money To Give Hurricane literary Supplement A creative writing magazine for indents will be published in May y funds Voted by the Senate hg week. Student writers are ■■»d to mail or bring their con-to the Hurricane of-<«, loom 325. hame of the new publication ■•not yet been announced. The ■Wune will be issued as a liter-■V ««pplement to the Hurricane 'Jffl-be distributed free with ane. The magazine yriU ■ ■ 1 of what its backers IPffl be a separate publication supplement will carry a of creative writing mater-and humorous essays, abort stories. It will be and will be designed college students, deadline for contributions publication is April 20. will be returned. Senate appropriated 8126 magazine and the Hurri-P»y the remainder of the imately $25.—HVS rand 'THE MIAMI i MOIRI« SELLS FIRST TICKET TO ADMIRAL'S WIFE »Will 'cmhellenic Plans Fraternity Meet To take»the place of regional Panhellenic conferences, the University of Miami Panhellenic council will sponsor in cooperation with local sorority alumnae a Workshop April 14. From 4 to 7 p.m. on’ that day, Greek-letter women will consider in roundtable discussions points under the central theme, "Privileges and Responsibilities of Fraternity Membership.” Chairman of the Workshop Dor-,othy Blanton" announces that ac» tivities will begin with a general meeting of all fraternity women in the theatre. Naomi Grossman, Panhellenic president, will present the program. Mrs. J. H. Miller will speak at this assembly on the “Contribution of Fraternities to Development of »Modern Woman.” [CONTINUED ON WAGE MX] Don't Like The Ibis For'43... n’t like this year’s Ibis. Ton’ll say it hasn’t got the pep, the d-8o, the candid pictures. And you’ll be right, at least on 1 count. At present the Ibia has maybe enough candid pictures l one layout. And they’re a mess. • get candid pictures at all this year we’ve got to get ’em from «•nt body. The book’s photographer, who’s been working on the assignment when film and bulb shortages permitted, ibly make enough. We’ve repehtedly asked for student eon-and promised that printsand negatives of school or school old be accepted and carefully treated. 1 . d.,jrs longer we’re going to depend on you to come across. * printing and binding about six weeks to finish the book. It s • weeks from now till the end of school, when the Ibie is sup-come out. The latest we can wait for your pictures is this at, when you get your IbU, don’t complain about the candid It Bure as hell wasn’t our fault.—DAI*______’ *8= Gremlins Thwarted; School Continues Gremlins! Take heed! “A regular college program WILL be operated for civilian students, both men and women, this summer and next year.” With this statement by Dr. Bowman F. Ashe, president of the University of Miami, gremlins and rumor mongers together were knocked down and sentenced to death for their future annihilation plans. Those grimy little gremlins have found disaster only for themselves in that blitz campaign threatened on the U. of M. campus recently. It seems that gremlins work hand in har>d with rumor mongers, the despised hindrances to war-time efficiency. Dr. Ashe further announced that the Navy has assigned 272 trainees to the University to begin academic work inly 1. These trainees will be instructed by the regular faculty of the University along with the regularly enrolled civilian students and will interfere in no way with the normal program heretofore conducted by the University. They will be permitted to enroll tn the classes with the regular civilian students and will be allowed to participate in all extra curricular activities of the regular students There may be some additional quotas of trainees assigned to the University et a later date but under no «¡opditions will the regular college program eon.e to a standstill next yeer.—MGL * Chi Omega Plans V- Mardi Gras Latest thing in the way of dances on campus is being planned by the Chi Omega sorority and consists of a Victory Mardi Gras, fomplete with carnival atmosphere of costumes, confetti, balloons, pop corn, and candied apples. The colorful affair will be presented April 16 at the Coral Gables Country club. A Victory Queen will rule She affair. She will' be chosen from nominations by each sorority, fraternity, and military group on campus. Votes will be taken at the dance for a penny apiece, the total of which will be donated to the American Red Cross fund along with all proceeds from the dance. The War council, included in the Victory theme, will sell war stamp corsages. Chairman of the gala affair is Bickley Keenan, who has appointed on her committee: Barbara Neblett for publicity; Betty Graham and Frances Heether, posters; Jane Mack, orchestra; Dorothy Parmelee, queen booth; Bobby Crimm, prizes; and Penny Roth, decorations.—MGL TwoHot Bands, Star dab Acts At Metropolis “Dance over here to help our boys over there,” is the slogan of the Red Cross benefit show and dance to be sponsored by the student body of the University of Miami on Thursday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the AU American Metropolis, Flagler and 68 ave. Proceeds of the affair will be given to-the Red Cross, and expenses of the dance will be paid by the student body. Upper class army navigators under Captain Merritt, aviation cadets under F. G. Walton Smith, navy navigators, and students at Embry Riddle in Coral Gables who do not have Thursday night classes will he given freedom to attend. Dormitory girls will be granted late permissions for the event according to Miss Mary B. Merritt. School buses will be used for transportation to and from the dance and will be available at 8:30 and 9 p.m. at the cafeteria entrance of the main building for students, at San Sebastian for faculty members and cadets, and at the USO in Coral Gables for Embry Riddle students. Two service binds, the OCS Tmy band from Miami Beach ind the navy band from Ops Locka, will provide music for the dancers, and leading acts froin (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR] Three Steri! Members Bate Promotion On 'Hurricane' Three Hurricane staff members promoted this week when Editor Hardin V. Stuart appointed Lee Carpenter copy editor and Mary Gene Lambert news editor. N. O. Philbert was also named counsellor at large for the publication. * Political Parties Seek Each Other’s Secrets; Candidates Named M party closets are being aired for skeletons by U party bigwigs and vice-versa this week following the announcement of nominations for Student Association offices. For president, the M party (GDI’s and Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Epsilon Phi, Chi Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, and Delta Zeta) has nominated Prince Brigham, sophomore. The U party (Delta Rhi Epsilon, Zeta Tau Alpha, Sigma Kappa, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha, and Phi Mu Alpha) has nominated Bill Lautz, a junior, member of Kappa Sig and Phi Mu Alpha. Candidates for vice president of the Student association are Sue Ogden, Chi Omega, M party, and Sari Jane Blinn, Kappa Kappa Gamma, U party. Nominees for secretary are Margaret Lund, Delta Zeta, M party, and Lillian Alderman, ZTA, U party. Ted Sakowitz, TEP, M party, and Ed Newbold, Sigma Chi, U party, are running for the office of school treasurer. On the slate for chief justice of the Honor court are Ira Van Bullock, Pi K A, M party, and Stew La Motte, Kappa Sig, M party. For justices of the Honor court the M party has nominated Martin Greenberg, Cornelia Brown, Judith Lopez, Rebecca Jackson (Chi Omega), Ruth Wol-kowsky (A E Phi), and Bill Pa-cetti, (Pi K A). The U party has nominated Natalie Frank«] (D Phi E), Jack Waxenburg (Phi Ep), Charlotte Motter (Sigma Kappa), Betty Batcheller (KKG), Ed Ruzomber-ka (Sigma Chi), and Leon Schultz (Lambda Chi). Elections will be held April it. —REG HJori _____ To School! Dorothy Ann Levin’s name was inadvertently left off the Honors list two weeks ago. Dr. E. V. Hjort, chairman of the committee on achoUrzhip stated Monday.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, April 07, 1943 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1943-04-07 |
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_19430407 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19430407 |
Digital ID | MHC_19430407_001 |
Full Text | - r • \ - Talent SecuredForReJ Cross DanceThursday mpus Dono rsAwaitB loodwago n ¡’O.K. I; Unit Anives April 15 Hood donations for use in uv-(jrea overseas may be made ky students of the University Of Miami Thursday; April 15, when, tks County’s Blood-Bank unit M>ti to Coral Gables. Registra-tiM of volunteers to give blood (or Military wounded will be contacted on Thursday and Friday fr«B 12 to 2 at the War Council tooth in the patio. . Volunteer blood-donors trill be accepted between the ages of 18 aad «0. All students who volunteer for the service must obtain mitten consent of parents. Those •ho have had serious illnesses within the last year or have ever offered from tuberculosis or ■tfDpex should inform attend-jag doctors. Only those with hMsogiobin over 80 are accepted. ftoe required for giving blood k »bout five minutes. No pain is •ttsehed to the actual operation tnd no weakness follows. Students who expect to give blood not eat for four hours be- fore appearing at the Blood-Bank mit Black coffee, with no sugar « cream, may be taken, but no ■ofid food is permissible. The Blood-Bank unit will appear on campus during the day Thinday to accommodate student nprtrants, and from 5:00 in the evening on will be located at the Coral Gables casualty station for fre Convenience of local citizen ».—DAL SiMte Votes Money To Give Hurricane literary Supplement A creative writing magazine for indents will be published in May y funds Voted by the Senate hg week. Student writers are ■■»d to mail or bring their con-to the Hurricane of-<«, loom 325. hame of the new publication ■•not yet been announced. The ■Wune will be issued as a liter-■V ««pplement to the Hurricane 'Jffl-be distributed free with ane. The magazine yriU ■ ■ 1 of what its backers IPffl be a separate publication supplement will carry a of creative writing mater-and humorous essays, abort stories. It will be and will be designed college students, deadline for contributions publication is April 20. will be returned. Senate appropriated 8126 magazine and the Hurri-P»y the remainder of the imately $25.—HVS rand 'THE MIAMI i MOIRI« SELLS FIRST TICKET TO ADMIRAL'S WIFE »Will 'cmhellenic Plans Fraternity Meet To take»the place of regional Panhellenic conferences, the University of Miami Panhellenic council will sponsor in cooperation with local sorority alumnae a Workshop April 14. From 4 to 7 p.m. on’ that day, Greek-letter women will consider in roundtable discussions points under the central theme, "Privileges and Responsibilities of Fraternity Membership.” Chairman of the Workshop Dor-,othy Blanton" announces that ac» tivities will begin with a general meeting of all fraternity women in the theatre. Naomi Grossman, Panhellenic president, will present the program. Mrs. J. H. Miller will speak at this assembly on the “Contribution of Fraternities to Development of »Modern Woman.” [CONTINUED ON WAGE MX] Don't Like The Ibis For'43... n’t like this year’s Ibis. Ton’ll say it hasn’t got the pep, the d-8o, the candid pictures. And you’ll be right, at least on 1 count. At present the Ibia has maybe enough candid pictures l one layout. And they’re a mess. • get candid pictures at all this year we’ve got to get ’em from «•nt body. The book’s photographer, who’s been working on the assignment when film and bulb shortages permitted, ibly make enough. We’ve repehtedly asked for student eon-and promised that printsand negatives of school or school old be accepted and carefully treated. 1 . d.,jrs longer we’re going to depend on you to come across. * printing and binding about six weeks to finish the book. It s • weeks from now till the end of school, when the Ibie is sup-come out. The latest we can wait for your pictures is this at, when you get your IbU, don’t complain about the candid It Bure as hell wasn’t our fault.—DAI*______’ *8= Gremlins Thwarted; School Continues Gremlins! Take heed! “A regular college program WILL be operated for civilian students, both men and women, this summer and next year.” With this statement by Dr. Bowman F. Ashe, president of the University of Miami, gremlins and rumor mongers together were knocked down and sentenced to death for their future annihilation plans. Those grimy little gremlins have found disaster only for themselves in that blitz campaign threatened on the U. of M. campus recently. It seems that gremlins work hand in har>d with rumor mongers, the despised hindrances to war-time efficiency. Dr. Ashe further announced that the Navy has assigned 272 trainees to the University to begin academic work inly 1. These trainees will be instructed by the regular faculty of the University along with the regularly enrolled civilian students and will interfere in no way with the normal program heretofore conducted by the University. They will be permitted to enroll tn the classes with the regular civilian students and will be allowed to participate in all extra curricular activities of the regular students There may be some additional quotas of trainees assigned to the University et a later date but under no «¡opditions will the regular college program eon.e to a standstill next yeer.—MGL * Chi Omega Plans V- Mardi Gras Latest thing in the way of dances on campus is being planned by the Chi Omega sorority and consists of a Victory Mardi Gras, fomplete with carnival atmosphere of costumes, confetti, balloons, pop corn, and candied apples. The colorful affair will be presented April 16 at the Coral Gables Country club. A Victory Queen will rule She affair. She will' be chosen from nominations by each sorority, fraternity, and military group on campus. Votes will be taken at the dance for a penny apiece, the total of which will be donated to the American Red Cross fund along with all proceeds from the dance. The War council, included in the Victory theme, will sell war stamp corsages. Chairman of the gala affair is Bickley Keenan, who has appointed on her committee: Barbara Neblett for publicity; Betty Graham and Frances Heether, posters; Jane Mack, orchestra; Dorothy Parmelee, queen booth; Bobby Crimm, prizes; and Penny Roth, decorations.—MGL TwoHot Bands, Star dab Acts At Metropolis “Dance over here to help our boys over there,” is the slogan of the Red Cross benefit show and dance to be sponsored by the student body of the University of Miami on Thursday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the AU American Metropolis, Flagler and 68 ave. Proceeds of the affair will be given to-the Red Cross, and expenses of the dance will be paid by the student body. Upper class army navigators under Captain Merritt, aviation cadets under F. G. Walton Smith, navy navigators, and students at Embry Riddle in Coral Gables who do not have Thursday night classes will he given freedom to attend. Dormitory girls will be granted late permissions for the event according to Miss Mary B. Merritt. School buses will be used for transportation to and from the dance and will be available at 8:30 and 9 p.m. at the cafeteria entrance of the main building for students, at San Sebastian for faculty members and cadets, and at the USO in Coral Gables for Embry Riddle students. Two service binds, the OCS Tmy band from Miami Beach ind the navy band from Ops Locka, will provide music for the dancers, and leading acts froin (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR] Three Steri! Members Bate Promotion On 'Hurricane' Three Hurricane staff members promoted this week when Editor Hardin V. Stuart appointed Lee Carpenter copy editor and Mary Gene Lambert news editor. N. O. Philbert was also named counsellor at large for the publication. * Political Parties Seek Each Other’s Secrets; Candidates Named M party closets are being aired for skeletons by U party bigwigs and vice-versa this week following the announcement of nominations for Student Association offices. For president, the M party (GDI’s and Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Epsilon Phi, Chi Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, and Delta Zeta) has nominated Prince Brigham, sophomore. The U party (Delta Rhi Epsilon, Zeta Tau Alpha, Sigma Kappa, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha, and Phi Mu Alpha) has nominated Bill Lautz, a junior, member of Kappa Sig and Phi Mu Alpha. Candidates for vice president of the Student association are Sue Ogden, Chi Omega, M party, and Sari Jane Blinn, Kappa Kappa Gamma, U party. Nominees for secretary are Margaret Lund, Delta Zeta, M party, and Lillian Alderman, ZTA, U party. Ted Sakowitz, TEP, M party, and Ed Newbold, Sigma Chi, U party, are running for the office of school treasurer. On the slate for chief justice of the Honor court are Ira Van Bullock, Pi K A, M party, and Stew La Motte, Kappa Sig, M party. For justices of the Honor court the M party has nominated Martin Greenberg, Cornelia Brown, Judith Lopez, Rebecca Jackson (Chi Omega), Ruth Wol-kowsky (A E Phi), and Bill Pa-cetti, (Pi K A). The U party has nominated Natalie Frank«] (D Phi E), Jack Waxenburg (Phi Ep), Charlotte Motter (Sigma Kappa), Betty Batcheller (KKG), Ed Ruzomber-ka (Sigma Chi), and Leon Schultz (Lambda Chi). Elections will be held April it. —REG HJori _____ To School! Dorothy Ann Levin’s name was inadvertently left off the Honors list two weeks ago. Dr. E. V. Hjort, chairman of the committee on achoUrzhip stated Monday. |
Archive | MHC_19430407_001.tif |
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