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ANNUAL 1941 Hurricane - Volume XV Coral Gables, Florida, November 14, 1941 Number 8 Miami’s Unbeaten Hurricanes Await Victory-Hungry Gators Student Produced Quarterly Magazine finder Discussion Publication of a quarterly mag-a«n*, to be student managed and written, is now under discussion. It will feature articles from the political and social science departments, a law review, and literary material. No date has been set for the first issue. The quarterly will have three honorary faculty sponsors, and will admit articles by professors. The idea for the magazine was formulated by George Malanos, William Reich, Morton Paglin, Stewart La Motte and Arthur Hill- Formal organization has not yet been arranged but at present representing departments are Lew Fogle, Arthur Hill, and Elias Powell, law; Charles Baake, George Malanos, and Morton Paglin, economics; Bernard Sokolow, history; George Young, Frank Brown, and Stewart La Motte, political science; William Reich, Ralph Nelli, and Frank Richardson, literature. Education Talk Set For Tuesday Special assembly of the School of Education will be held on Tuesday, November 18th, at 11:00 in the theatre. Dean Charles R. Foster and members of the School of Education staff will outline the requirements of the internship program in teacher training, and will deal with questions concerning the scheduling of internship in student programs. Accordnig to Dean Foster, stunts will find it necessary to ‘e plans ahead of time if they nd to qualify for internship Ing the senior year. Tuesday’s ‘ting is intended to give them nee in this planning. Students in other schools who to prepare for teaching who should also know about internship plan, are asked to the assembly. T helma Cox, Zeta Tau Alpha, was selected by members of the senior class to reign as Queen over the three day Homecoming celebration this weekend. Kappa Sigs Will Reveal Sweetheart At First Black & White Ball, Nov. 19 Kappa Sigmas will announce their choice for Kappa Sigma Sweetheart at their first annual Black and White Ball to be held next Wednesday night, Nov. 19 at the Coral Gables Country Club. No admission will be charged. Every fraternity man on campus will receive a bid ¿o the dance, and each member of Kappa Sigma IBIS STAFF MEETS, PLEASE Tha Ibis staff will meet Tuesday morning at 11 in room 325. All members are asked to attend, complete with assignments dne. Positions are still open for prospective members._________ Dislikes 'Shepherd's Hey' Nobody Knows Flckanschar I don’t like folk songs,” said Percy Grainger, blandly un-of the bombshell he was bursting, “and I prefer choral to band 1 particularly dislike The Shepherd’s Hey’.” pianist-composer, who is famous for his arrangements of folk explained, however, any form of art which has exerted so pro-d an influence on the life of _ __■____ Campus Calendar Sunday, November 16, 7 to 8 p.m. —Kappa Kappa Gamma Coffee for Province President, DeSoto Blvd. 8 p.m.—Concert, Granada Bldg. Monday, Novaasbar 17, 12 n. — took 1 People as folk songs, should not allowed to die out, as the Eng-songs were doing. True, there those who were collecting but the notes were tran-i.by ear, while Mr. Graing-: them down by phonograph atching all the subtleties, sns, and harmonies, instruments are merely ns of the human Grainger. The flower, are tCONTINUED ON SAGE TWO] will extend five bids, to Independents. No person wib be admitted unless formally dressed- Invitations must be presented at the door. Wednesday, eleven girls were nominated for Kappa Sigma Sweetheart. Those receiving the traditional corsages ’./ere Rebecca Jackson, Dorothy Stuart, Alvalyn Voege, Ann Upshaw. Betty Jean Bozarth, Jacque Watson, Martha Kautzmann, AnnelTa Blanton, Mary Maroon, Nancy Sanders, and Mary Alice Kirton. In the past the announcement of Kappa Sig Sweetheart has been made at the Kampus King Kapers in the Spring. A new Kappa Sig song, “Kap-na Sigma Waltz,” will be introduced at thé Black and White Ball. ENGLISH HONORS MEETS English Honors Society will a luncheon meeting Wednes- will Title Classic To Draw 30,000 Saturday A record crowd of over 30,000 partisan Miami football fans will jam into Burdine Stadium Saturday night, at 8:30, to see Miami’s high-flying, undefeated and untied Hurricanes battle their most bitter grid rival, Florida’s fighting Gators. The state football championship, as well as the Hurricanes mighty defensive record will be at stake. The Gainesville squad, coached New Members Added To Junior Honorary Group by Tom Lieb, have dropped five decisions out of seven tilts this season. Florida opened with a decisive 26-0 win over an outclassed Randolph-Macon eleven. The following week, the Gators faced Mississippi State, 1941 Orange Bowl winners, and dropped a close 6-0 verdict. Tampa, next on the list, absorbed a stinging 46-6 defeat. After losing another 6-0 decision, this time to Villanova, the cocky Liebmen invaded College Park, and suffered a 13-12 upset at the hands of the University of Maryland. Louisiana State kicked a perfect placement through the uprights in the last six seconds of play to send the Gators down in defeat for the fourth time. A week’s layoff gave Florida plenty of rest for their big game in Jacksonville with Georgia’s Bulldogs last Saturday afternoon, but Frank Sinkwicff had too many big guns for the upstate boys and single-handedly whipped them 19-3. This week’s clash will be the third meeting between Miami and Florida. The Hurricanes took the first game at Gainesville in 1938, 19-6, when Captain Eddie Dunn led his teammates in a last half [CONTINUED ON PACE ELEVEN] Pi Chis Name Date For Queen of Clubs Setting the date for December 12, Pi Chi fraternity announces that tickets are now going on sale for its annual Queen of Clubs dance, to be held this year at the Miami Biltmore Country Club. Nominations for the title of Queen of Clubs are made by all sororities. Judges attend a banquet with the candidates before the dance and rate them according to beauty, poise, charm, and personality. PhotographContest Deadline Extended Deadline for entries in the Ibis photography contest, previously scheduled for December 1, has been extended to December 15. Two prizes for the winning entries, one prize of five dollars for the best picture of general school activity, and another prize of five dollars for the best candid shot of any Universtiy of Miami instructor. Any number of entries may be submitted provided they are photos of general school activity or instructor*. ’ - Junior hosts will begin activities this year with the Homecoming celebration. Newly-chosen members of the honorary society elected officers and made plans for the year at a meeting Tuesday. Jim Jeffrey was elected president and Lorraine Corsiglia and Bette Hatch were elected -vice-president and secretary. Miss Mary B. Merritt, with Foster E. Alter faculty adviser of the group, presided at the meeting. Other juniors elected to the association are Doris Acree, Mary Lee Hickman, Dorothy Levin, Ruth Pressett, Bill Gale, Robert O’Reilly, Thomas Smith, Jack Kendall, and Milton De Voe. The list is still incomplete. Frosh Nominate, Postpone Elections Forced to postpone elections again, the freshman class made nominations for remaining offices at a meeting Tuesday. Candidates for the positions are: secretary, Barbara Price and Madlyn Anderson; treasurer, John Lowe, Chad Trafford, and Louise Maroon; senators, La VerVn Hu-nicke, John Lowe, Ronnie Duncan, Karl Hoff, George Bernstein, James Dunn, Virginia Meyer, and Ruth Wolkowsky. Last week Mike O’Brien was elected president and James Richardson, vice-president. Dr. Louis K. Manley, professor of political science, and Ernie Du-haime, alumni chairman of homecoming, spoke at the meeting. Medical Students To Take Tests Students desiring entrance into medical school will be permitted to take aptitude tests given under the supervision of the Psychology Department. Two tests will be given this year; the first on December 6, the second during the spring term. All students interested should see Miss Barrett at once. The National Association of Medical Colleges expects all prospective medical students to take these examinations. Last year in every major university in the nation, over 11606, students took
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 14, 1941 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1941-11-14 |
Coverage Temporal | 1940-1949 |
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_19411114 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19411114 |
Digital ID | MHC_19411114_001 |
Full Text | ANNUAL 1941 Hurricane - Volume XV Coral Gables, Florida, November 14, 1941 Number 8 Miami’s Unbeaten Hurricanes Await Victory-Hungry Gators Student Produced Quarterly Magazine finder Discussion Publication of a quarterly mag-a«n*, to be student managed and written, is now under discussion. It will feature articles from the political and social science departments, a law review, and literary material. No date has been set for the first issue. The quarterly will have three honorary faculty sponsors, and will admit articles by professors. The idea for the magazine was formulated by George Malanos, William Reich, Morton Paglin, Stewart La Motte and Arthur Hill- Formal organization has not yet been arranged but at present representing departments are Lew Fogle, Arthur Hill, and Elias Powell, law; Charles Baake, George Malanos, and Morton Paglin, economics; Bernard Sokolow, history; George Young, Frank Brown, and Stewart La Motte, political science; William Reich, Ralph Nelli, and Frank Richardson, literature. Education Talk Set For Tuesday Special assembly of the School of Education will be held on Tuesday, November 18th, at 11:00 in the theatre. Dean Charles R. Foster and members of the School of Education staff will outline the requirements of the internship program in teacher training, and will deal with questions concerning the scheduling of internship in student programs. Accordnig to Dean Foster, stunts will find it necessary to ‘e plans ahead of time if they nd to qualify for internship Ing the senior year. Tuesday’s ‘ting is intended to give them nee in this planning. Students in other schools who to prepare for teaching who should also know about internship plan, are asked to the assembly. T helma Cox, Zeta Tau Alpha, was selected by members of the senior class to reign as Queen over the three day Homecoming celebration this weekend. Kappa Sigs Will Reveal Sweetheart At First Black & White Ball, Nov. 19 Kappa Sigmas will announce their choice for Kappa Sigma Sweetheart at their first annual Black and White Ball to be held next Wednesday night, Nov. 19 at the Coral Gables Country Club. No admission will be charged. Every fraternity man on campus will receive a bid ¿o the dance, and each member of Kappa Sigma IBIS STAFF MEETS, PLEASE Tha Ibis staff will meet Tuesday morning at 11 in room 325. All members are asked to attend, complete with assignments dne. Positions are still open for prospective members._________ Dislikes 'Shepherd's Hey' Nobody Knows Flckanschar I don’t like folk songs,” said Percy Grainger, blandly un-of the bombshell he was bursting, “and I prefer choral to band 1 particularly dislike The Shepherd’s Hey’.” pianist-composer, who is famous for his arrangements of folk explained, however, any form of art which has exerted so pro-d an influence on the life of _ __■____ Campus Calendar Sunday, November 16, 7 to 8 p.m. —Kappa Kappa Gamma Coffee for Province President, DeSoto Blvd. 8 p.m.—Concert, Granada Bldg. Monday, Novaasbar 17, 12 n. — took 1 People as folk songs, should not allowed to die out, as the Eng-songs were doing. True, there those who were collecting but the notes were tran-i.by ear, while Mr. Graing-: them down by phonograph atching all the subtleties, sns, and harmonies, instruments are merely ns of the human Grainger. The flower, are tCONTINUED ON SAGE TWO] will extend five bids, to Independents. No person wib be admitted unless formally dressed- Invitations must be presented at the door. Wednesday, eleven girls were nominated for Kappa Sigma Sweetheart. Those receiving the traditional corsages ’./ere Rebecca Jackson, Dorothy Stuart, Alvalyn Voege, Ann Upshaw. Betty Jean Bozarth, Jacque Watson, Martha Kautzmann, AnnelTa Blanton, Mary Maroon, Nancy Sanders, and Mary Alice Kirton. In the past the announcement of Kappa Sig Sweetheart has been made at the Kampus King Kapers in the Spring. A new Kappa Sig song, “Kap-na Sigma Waltz,” will be introduced at thé Black and White Ball. ENGLISH HONORS MEETS English Honors Society will a luncheon meeting Wednes- will Title Classic To Draw 30,000 Saturday A record crowd of over 30,000 partisan Miami football fans will jam into Burdine Stadium Saturday night, at 8:30, to see Miami’s high-flying, undefeated and untied Hurricanes battle their most bitter grid rival, Florida’s fighting Gators. The state football championship, as well as the Hurricanes mighty defensive record will be at stake. The Gainesville squad, coached New Members Added To Junior Honorary Group by Tom Lieb, have dropped five decisions out of seven tilts this season. Florida opened with a decisive 26-0 win over an outclassed Randolph-Macon eleven. The following week, the Gators faced Mississippi State, 1941 Orange Bowl winners, and dropped a close 6-0 verdict. Tampa, next on the list, absorbed a stinging 46-6 defeat. After losing another 6-0 decision, this time to Villanova, the cocky Liebmen invaded College Park, and suffered a 13-12 upset at the hands of the University of Maryland. Louisiana State kicked a perfect placement through the uprights in the last six seconds of play to send the Gators down in defeat for the fourth time. A week’s layoff gave Florida plenty of rest for their big game in Jacksonville with Georgia’s Bulldogs last Saturday afternoon, but Frank Sinkwicff had too many big guns for the upstate boys and single-handedly whipped them 19-3. This week’s clash will be the third meeting between Miami and Florida. The Hurricanes took the first game at Gainesville in 1938, 19-6, when Captain Eddie Dunn led his teammates in a last half [CONTINUED ON PACE ELEVEN] Pi Chis Name Date For Queen of Clubs Setting the date for December 12, Pi Chi fraternity announces that tickets are now going on sale for its annual Queen of Clubs dance, to be held this year at the Miami Biltmore Country Club. Nominations for the title of Queen of Clubs are made by all sororities. Judges attend a banquet with the candidates before the dance and rate them according to beauty, poise, charm, and personality. PhotographContest Deadline Extended Deadline for entries in the Ibis photography contest, previously scheduled for December 1, has been extended to December 15. Two prizes for the winning entries, one prize of five dollars for the best picture of general school activity, and another prize of five dollars for the best candid shot of any Universtiy of Miami instructor. Any number of entries may be submitted provided they are photos of general school activity or instructor*. ’ - Junior hosts will begin activities this year with the Homecoming celebration. Newly-chosen members of the honorary society elected officers and made plans for the year at a meeting Tuesday. Jim Jeffrey was elected president and Lorraine Corsiglia and Bette Hatch were elected -vice-president and secretary. Miss Mary B. Merritt, with Foster E. Alter faculty adviser of the group, presided at the meeting. Other juniors elected to the association are Doris Acree, Mary Lee Hickman, Dorothy Levin, Ruth Pressett, Bill Gale, Robert O’Reilly, Thomas Smith, Jack Kendall, and Milton De Voe. The list is still incomplete. Frosh Nominate, Postpone Elections Forced to postpone elections again, the freshman class made nominations for remaining offices at a meeting Tuesday. Candidates for the positions are: secretary, Barbara Price and Madlyn Anderson; treasurer, John Lowe, Chad Trafford, and Louise Maroon; senators, La VerVn Hu-nicke, John Lowe, Ronnie Duncan, Karl Hoff, George Bernstein, James Dunn, Virginia Meyer, and Ruth Wolkowsky. Last week Mike O’Brien was elected president and James Richardson, vice-president. Dr. Louis K. Manley, professor of political science, and Ernie Du-haime, alumni chairman of homecoming, spoke at the meeting. Medical Students To Take Tests Students desiring entrance into medical school will be permitted to take aptitude tests given under the supervision of the Psychology Department. Two tests will be given this year; the first on December 6, the second during the spring term. All students interested should see Miss Barrett at once. The National Association of Medical Colleges expects all prospective medical students to take these examinations. Last year in every major university in the nation, over 11606, students took |
Archive | MHC_19411114_001.tif |
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