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IFC, Panhel Greet Frosh UM students flew into Miami International Airport over the weekend from points all across the United States and overseas. They were met by representatives of Paohellenic and the Interfratemity Council who arranged transportation to campus for the incoming students. The greeting at the airport was the first introduction to the Greek system for many freshman students who arrived at UM for the first time. The service rendered by IFC and Panhellenic proved invaluable for many incoming students when taxi rates soared higher than the jumbo jets as taxi drivers took advantage of the situation. Designed to be part of Greek Rush week, the airport welcome kept many Greeks busy from early morning to late at night welcoming the several thousand UM students who arrived Saturday and Sunday. S Dave Smith discusses the new role of the Rest- I' dent Advisor . . . page 4 Voi. 47, No. 1 urrtranr - Tuesday, September 14, 1971 Disney’» Famous Characters Are Checking Progress at Disney World • ...at c»n*i ruction move» rapidly toward an October opening $300-Million Disney World * To Make Florida Debut By IRIS HOROWITZ HurrlCMM Attoclat* Editor The nation’s busiest construction site, and easily the most unusual, is Walt Disney’s new family-oriented vacation resort, Disney World, and “Magic Kingdom" theme park in Central Florida, 15 miles southwest of Orlando on Highway 192. With some 6-000 workers now on the site hurrying toward an October opening, the Disney project is currently the nation’s largest nongovernmental construction effort. The 2,500-acre recreation and entertainment- complex will cost $300-million by opening day. It will combine an exciting new-“Magic Kingdom” theme park similar to California's Disneyland plus unique theme resort hotels, water sports, and outdoor recreation of every kind. During the first year of operation, it is expected to attract more than ten million visitors and employ some «,000 persons. The Vacation Kingdom is a new concept in resorts, a carefully planned environment for fun and relaxation under a single design and management with each of its components complementing the other. Everything is connected by a varied network of transportation ranging from space-age monorail trains to 19th-century sidewheel steamboats and surface trams All six adventure-fille^ lands in the “Magic King- dom” will be open in October including turn-of-the-century Main Street USA; Adventure-land; Liberty Square; Fron-tierland; Fantasyland; and Tomorrowiand. Each has a different and exciting theme with rides and attractions, shows and , shops, restaurants and entertainers themed to the individual land. Silent fjlms at the Main Street Cinema, a double sundae at the Plaza Ice Cream Parlor, or a player-piano tune in the Penny Arcade are among Main Street’s turn-of- „ the-century features. Stepping into timeless lands of far off jungles, guests will discover island castaways and ancient Asian temple ruins hidden among the vines and bamboo thickets in Adventureland. One quick turn brings visitors into Frontier America where they can explore the cowboys and Indians of more than a hundred years ago. Following the rivers back another fifty years, visitors can discover the land of the colonies. In Liberty Square, a giant oak tree supporting the signals of Minutemen, the Hail of Presidents, and the New England witches are joined with their ghostly ancestors in the Haunted Mansions. The happiest of all, Fanta-svland. is at the apex of the Magic Kingdom, entered through Cinderella’s Castle. Knights of old appear in jousting competition, one visits with young people around the globe in “It's a Small World," and Captain Nemo’s submarines journey 20,000 leagues under the sea. For drivers young and old the future, Tomorrowiand, holds a Grand Prix Raceway, a flight to the moon or a jet-speeded visual trip across “America the Beautiful." Theming is also a unique characteristic of the five resort hotels planned for Walt Disney World. In October, the first two will be ready for guests and sightseers including the Con-tempoarry Resort-Hotel and the Polynesian Village. Later in the five year opening phase, Venetian, Persian, and Asian theme resorts will be added. "You can dream, design, and build the most wonderful place in the world,” Walt Disney once said, “but it re- quires people to make the dream a reality.” The importance of that philosophy is being underscored at Disney World’» Vacation Kingdom where the curtain is going up on the world’s largest entertainment and recreation “stage.” Every person who works “on stage” and “backstage” at Walt Disney’s World is a member of the “cast” according to Jim Passilla, director of employee relations for the Florida Vacation Kingdom. Disney World’s Employment Department has begun interviewing applicants for about 5,000 full time jobs that will become available this month. Jobs will be available in the theme park, resoft hotels, water and land recreation areas and golf courses. UM For By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of Tht Hurrlcar. staff Approximately 12,318 UM undergraduates will finish registering today and tomorrow for the fall semester, according to UM registrar George W. Smith. The bulk of thesa students will be returning to UM, but 2300 Freshman and 1200 transfer students are also expected. In an effort to ease the pains of registration WVUM will be broadcasting registration reports every half hour. These reports will include closed-out classes and line tie-ups. To aid new students, pre-advisement will be offered throughout the registration period. “Pre-advisement is a great advantage,” Associate Registrar Sidney Welaburg said. •With it, all the student has to do is pick-up his coupons.” Registration can be simple and fast if the student follows the correct procedures. The registering student must take his “Permit to Register’’ which contains the time, date, an location of his registration to the room designated on the permit. “No one will be allowed to begin registration prior to the date or time Indicated,” Weisburg said. “However, if a student is unable to begin registration at the time indicated on his permit to register, be may register anytime thereafter during regular registration.” When a student arrives at the assigned starting room, he is seated and given a class schedule sheet, a final exam schedule, and additional material. After brief instructions by the starting room personnel he picks-up his 5-card kit at the front of the room. These include a master information card, an advisor's card, a personnel dean's card, and a fee card. In addition there will be a double-stripped pink credit-only card, for use if the student elects jo take a course for pass-fail rather than a grade. The four registration cards must be filled out by the student and then checked by the starting room personnel. All freshmen and transfer Students with less than 56 credits should also have a Placement Test Results Card and a Speech Placement Test Results Card. The student then precedes to the Otto G. Richter Library. If the student has been pre-advised by a faculty advisor (NOT a fellow student) he may immediately pick-up his course coupons. If he hasn't been pre-advised(this applies to new students particularly) he must go immediately where the academic advisors are located. Working together with his Continued On Page 2 Player Profile included in the special faotbaU seepage IB 284-4401 iU Sas I Nets 12,00 Fa Students Register For UM’s Largest College • .. during early registration NEWMAN ■ 'Rfe dfe Effective Monday Auto Ticketing Starts Enforcement of campus parking regulations by UM Security and Coral Gables police will begin Monday, September 20, according to Fred W. Doerner, Jr., UM director of security. UM security personnel will handle campus parking lot violations, while the Gables police will cover city streets within ttie UM campus. The announcement came as UM President Henry King Stanford named appointments to the new University Parking Appeals Board, consisting of eight members with a student chairman. The Board has authority over all parking ticket appeals from ail members of the University community and from visitors. John Scott Anderson has been appointed by President Stanford as non-voting chairman of the Board upon the recommendation of Ray Bellamy, Student Body Government president. Fml Doerner ... enforcing The other members are students Oliver Parker and Alan Minuskin, nominated by Bellamy and ratified by majority vote of the SBG Senate; Dr. Thomas A. Wills and Professor Arthur G. Phillips, Faculty Senate representative«; Miss Audrey Davy and Kennedy L. Platt, employee representatives; and Harry Meigs and Ted J. E. Watts, Administration representatives. -ILjnsidejl Today's 'Cane Presidential Candidate Birch Bayh — an exclusive ‘Cane interview...........................................Page 5 Dave Goldstein interviews UM Head Football Coach Fran Curci............................................Page IB Non-Credit Courses offered this fall listed on page 8 EYE.....................3 Letter«.................5 Donn Tilson.............4 Ed Lang................IB Dave Goldstein.........IB Intramurals....,.......SB Entertainment ..........10 Orange Bowl ............2B Tony Passarello..........4 Bike Thefts..............6 Dave Fisher..............4 Draft..........j........3 Named to the Parking Authority Committee, a separate group which formulates the motor vehicle rules and regulations, were undergraduate students Esther Shapiro, vice chairman, William Bader, and Fred Gillis, representing the Graduate Student Association. The Committee is chaired by Professor Duane Koenig. All persons (students, faculty and staff employees) wishing to appeal parking violation tickets must file an appeal with the Bursar’s Office at Window No. 8, first floor, Ashe Administration Building, no later than 10 school days after the official notice being appealed has been issued. The day on which the official notice was issued shall be counted as the first day. Fines must be paid at the Bursar’s office. Fines for parking violations are: • $3 for illegal parking where decal does not match lot. • $5 for illegally parking in “D” (disabled) spaces, driveways, U.S. Weather Bureau spaces, and loading zones. • $10 for lack of a parking decal. Under UM parking regulations, unpaid fines will result in students having their se-m e s t e r grades withheld, while faculty and staff will have fines deducted from their pay checks. Workers Need Fla. Auto Tags To avoid problems with Florida police, out of state students who have brought their cars with them and are holding a part-time job are advised to obtain Florida license plates and a Florida inspection sticker. Car registration for students who are not employed is not necessary. Florida license plates can be obtained from any of the license services found in the yellow pages of the phone book, or from the county office located at 862 N.W. 23rd Street.. v
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, September 14, 1971 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1971-09-14 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (20 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_19710914 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19710914 |
Digital ID | MHC_19710914_001 |
Full Text | IFC, Panhel Greet Frosh UM students flew into Miami International Airport over the weekend from points all across the United States and overseas. They were met by representatives of Paohellenic and the Interfratemity Council who arranged transportation to campus for the incoming students. The greeting at the airport was the first introduction to the Greek system for many freshman students who arrived at UM for the first time. The service rendered by IFC and Panhellenic proved invaluable for many incoming students when taxi rates soared higher than the jumbo jets as taxi drivers took advantage of the situation. Designed to be part of Greek Rush week, the airport welcome kept many Greeks busy from early morning to late at night welcoming the several thousand UM students who arrived Saturday and Sunday. S Dave Smith discusses the new role of the Rest- I' dent Advisor . . . page 4 Voi. 47, No. 1 urrtranr - Tuesday, September 14, 1971 Disney’» Famous Characters Are Checking Progress at Disney World • ...at c»n*i ruction move» rapidly toward an October opening $300-Million Disney World * To Make Florida Debut By IRIS HOROWITZ HurrlCMM Attoclat* Editor The nation’s busiest construction site, and easily the most unusual, is Walt Disney’s new family-oriented vacation resort, Disney World, and “Magic Kingdom" theme park in Central Florida, 15 miles southwest of Orlando on Highway 192. With some 6-000 workers now on the site hurrying toward an October opening, the Disney project is currently the nation’s largest nongovernmental construction effort. The 2,500-acre recreation and entertainment- complex will cost $300-million by opening day. It will combine an exciting new-“Magic Kingdom” theme park similar to California's Disneyland plus unique theme resort hotels, water sports, and outdoor recreation of every kind. During the first year of operation, it is expected to attract more than ten million visitors and employ some «,000 persons. The Vacation Kingdom is a new concept in resorts, a carefully planned environment for fun and relaxation under a single design and management with each of its components complementing the other. Everything is connected by a varied network of transportation ranging from space-age monorail trains to 19th-century sidewheel steamboats and surface trams All six adventure-fille^ lands in the “Magic King- dom” will be open in October including turn-of-the-century Main Street USA; Adventure-land; Liberty Square; Fron-tierland; Fantasyland; and Tomorrowiand. Each has a different and exciting theme with rides and attractions, shows and , shops, restaurants and entertainers themed to the individual land. Silent fjlms at the Main Street Cinema, a double sundae at the Plaza Ice Cream Parlor, or a player-piano tune in the Penny Arcade are among Main Street’s turn-of- „ the-century features. Stepping into timeless lands of far off jungles, guests will discover island castaways and ancient Asian temple ruins hidden among the vines and bamboo thickets in Adventureland. One quick turn brings visitors into Frontier America where they can explore the cowboys and Indians of more than a hundred years ago. Following the rivers back another fifty years, visitors can discover the land of the colonies. In Liberty Square, a giant oak tree supporting the signals of Minutemen, the Hail of Presidents, and the New England witches are joined with their ghostly ancestors in the Haunted Mansions. The happiest of all, Fanta-svland. is at the apex of the Magic Kingdom, entered through Cinderella’s Castle. Knights of old appear in jousting competition, one visits with young people around the globe in “It's a Small World," and Captain Nemo’s submarines journey 20,000 leagues under the sea. For drivers young and old the future, Tomorrowiand, holds a Grand Prix Raceway, a flight to the moon or a jet-speeded visual trip across “America the Beautiful." Theming is also a unique characteristic of the five resort hotels planned for Walt Disney World. In October, the first two will be ready for guests and sightseers including the Con-tempoarry Resort-Hotel and the Polynesian Village. Later in the five year opening phase, Venetian, Persian, and Asian theme resorts will be added. "You can dream, design, and build the most wonderful place in the world,” Walt Disney once said, “but it re- quires people to make the dream a reality.” The importance of that philosophy is being underscored at Disney World’» Vacation Kingdom where the curtain is going up on the world’s largest entertainment and recreation “stage.” Every person who works “on stage” and “backstage” at Walt Disney’s World is a member of the “cast” according to Jim Passilla, director of employee relations for the Florida Vacation Kingdom. Disney World’s Employment Department has begun interviewing applicants for about 5,000 full time jobs that will become available this month. Jobs will be available in the theme park, resoft hotels, water and land recreation areas and golf courses. UM For By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Of Tht Hurrlcar. staff Approximately 12,318 UM undergraduates will finish registering today and tomorrow for the fall semester, according to UM registrar George W. Smith. The bulk of thesa students will be returning to UM, but 2300 Freshman and 1200 transfer students are also expected. In an effort to ease the pains of registration WVUM will be broadcasting registration reports every half hour. These reports will include closed-out classes and line tie-ups. To aid new students, pre-advisement will be offered throughout the registration period. “Pre-advisement is a great advantage,” Associate Registrar Sidney Welaburg said. •With it, all the student has to do is pick-up his coupons.” Registration can be simple and fast if the student follows the correct procedures. The registering student must take his “Permit to Register’’ which contains the time, date, an location of his registration to the room designated on the permit. “No one will be allowed to begin registration prior to the date or time Indicated,” Weisburg said. “However, if a student is unable to begin registration at the time indicated on his permit to register, be may register anytime thereafter during regular registration.” When a student arrives at the assigned starting room, he is seated and given a class schedule sheet, a final exam schedule, and additional material. After brief instructions by the starting room personnel he picks-up his 5-card kit at the front of the room. These include a master information card, an advisor's card, a personnel dean's card, and a fee card. In addition there will be a double-stripped pink credit-only card, for use if the student elects jo take a course for pass-fail rather than a grade. The four registration cards must be filled out by the student and then checked by the starting room personnel. All freshmen and transfer Students with less than 56 credits should also have a Placement Test Results Card and a Speech Placement Test Results Card. The student then precedes to the Otto G. Richter Library. If the student has been pre-advised by a faculty advisor (NOT a fellow student) he may immediately pick-up his course coupons. If he hasn't been pre-advised(this applies to new students particularly) he must go immediately where the academic advisors are located. Working together with his Continued On Page 2 Player Profile included in the special faotbaU seepage IB 284-4401 iU Sas I Nets 12,00 Fa Students Register For UM’s Largest College • .. during early registration NEWMAN ■ 'Rfe dfe Effective Monday Auto Ticketing Starts Enforcement of campus parking regulations by UM Security and Coral Gables police will begin Monday, September 20, according to Fred W. Doerner, Jr., UM director of security. UM security personnel will handle campus parking lot violations, while the Gables police will cover city streets within ttie UM campus. The announcement came as UM President Henry King Stanford named appointments to the new University Parking Appeals Board, consisting of eight members with a student chairman. The Board has authority over all parking ticket appeals from ail members of the University community and from visitors. John Scott Anderson has been appointed by President Stanford as non-voting chairman of the Board upon the recommendation of Ray Bellamy, Student Body Government president. Fml Doerner ... enforcing The other members are students Oliver Parker and Alan Minuskin, nominated by Bellamy and ratified by majority vote of the SBG Senate; Dr. Thomas A. Wills and Professor Arthur G. Phillips, Faculty Senate representative«; Miss Audrey Davy and Kennedy L. Platt, employee representatives; and Harry Meigs and Ted J. E. Watts, Administration representatives. -ILjnsidejl Today's 'Cane Presidential Candidate Birch Bayh — an exclusive ‘Cane interview...........................................Page 5 Dave Goldstein interviews UM Head Football Coach Fran Curci............................................Page IB Non-Credit Courses offered this fall listed on page 8 EYE.....................3 Letter«.................5 Donn Tilson.............4 Ed Lang................IB Dave Goldstein.........IB Intramurals....,.......SB Entertainment ..........10 Orange Bowl ............2B Tony Passarello..........4 Bike Thefts..............6 Dave Fisher..............4 Draft..........j........3 Named to the Parking Authority Committee, a separate group which formulates the motor vehicle rules and regulations, were undergraduate students Esther Shapiro, vice chairman, William Bader, and Fred Gillis, representing the Graduate Student Association. The Committee is chaired by Professor Duane Koenig. All persons (students, faculty and staff employees) wishing to appeal parking violation tickets must file an appeal with the Bursar’s Office at Window No. 8, first floor, Ashe Administration Building, no later than 10 school days after the official notice being appealed has been issued. The day on which the official notice was issued shall be counted as the first day. Fines must be paid at the Bursar’s office. Fines for parking violations are: • $3 for illegal parking where decal does not match lot. • $5 for illegally parking in “D” (disabled) spaces, driveways, U.S. Weather Bureau spaces, and loading zones. • $10 for lack of a parking decal. Under UM parking regulations, unpaid fines will result in students having their se-m e s t e r grades withheld, while faculty and staff will have fines deducted from their pay checks. Workers Need Fla. Auto Tags To avoid problems with Florida police, out of state students who have brought their cars with them and are holding a part-time job are advised to obtain Florida license plates and a Florida inspection sticker. Car registration for students who are not employed is not necessary. Florida license plates can be obtained from any of the license services found in the yellow pages of the phone book, or from the county office located at 862 N.W. 23rd Street.. v |
Archive | MHC_19710914_001.tif |
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