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Subject to cel] at any tine is Betty KidweQ, wht. is a volunteer in the reserve ambulance corps. Plane spotter Natalie Frenkel spends four hours s week with her duties. Merle Blount spends much of her free tine at the filter center at her observation poet. Likewise Etna Norton, Betty Bateh- OF MIAMI ¡Accordance with President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s request (December 7 be kept sacred throughout the nation, faculty, and navigation cadets will celebrate that day with a mOi-gtview and “Remember Pearl Harbor” meeting in the tennis MIAMI. riCIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION • UNIVERSITY NOMEMBER 25. 1942 NO. 10 will be excused at s Research »y Scientists G. Walton Smith, iot of zoology at the has been awarded a the outstanding re-of 1941 by the Flor-of Sciences. The ____it was made at a following the society's on Saturday, Not. last year’s Academy Dr. Smith read several based on investigations with marine zoology ear-in South Florida and in jus. The articles include: ___ and Mode of Transmis- ef the 1939 and 1940 Sponge tatity,” “Madreporaria (coral the Miami Area,” and "A Apparatus for Determining By Tolerances in Marine Or- I sponge mortality of 1939 1940 ruined a five million and Dr. Smith's . thus have commer- ____ The apparatus dis- by the professor in one of is his own invention. i Rationing at Debate that kiss-rationing able, unnecessary since no shortage, un-Ameri-we it would lower mo-a potential ruination of dty, a Delta Zeta team I representatives from the staff in the intramural ala yesterday afternoon —_ the negative on the . (Resolved: that the Uni-ef Miami administration I ration kissing for the dura-ware Muriel Copinna and JBtripiing. Edison Archer y Weiner, basing their i on the conservation of materials, pleaded for sed rationing. Is-for the affirmative was red has gone to war." i Zetas fought the ration the grounds of uneon-iity. “Freedom of wor-I freedom of the press are in the constitution, fs n kiss without a was their motto. I^were awarded both ed victorious from ths ’ debates Monday i rs-up were Kappa * Alpha Epsilon Phi. of the event w Debate couneQ. ■w»s in charge of ar •¡»eulty members n were Dr. C. Dr. H. Fr > Dr. Harold 11 a.m. to see the review on the main field in which University students in the marine, army, army air force, and naval reserves, as well aa all cadets studying here, will participate. Exercises of war emphasis win follow immediately in the tennis stadium with Dr. Louis K. Manley as the principal speaker. Sitting on the speaker’s platform win be the heads of the armed service work here: Capt. Fred R. Merritt, of the U. S. Army Air Force Training detachment; Lt. Comm. T. C. Brownell, U. S. Navy; and Capt. Charles Lund, Pan American Airways. The program is nnder the direction of Dean of Women Mary B. Merritt and Dean of Men Foster E. Alter, and is sponsored by the Student War Council as part of its effort to make students more war conscious. A survey is being made by the council to determine accurately the extent of student war effort. In addition to this woTk, its members are planning fire and air raid drills, and will continue its war bond and stamp drive begun by co-eds this week. Classes will be resumed at 1 p.m.—BHB S narks Name Two Freshmen In New Membership Ruling Admitting freshmen for the first time as a regular part of their process, Snarks, the creative writers’ honorary, chose two new members at a meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Natalie Grimes Lawrence, faculty sponsor. Rodney Winfield and Lester Moore were the two chosen under the new ruling.—DAL No School TIR Monday; Thao Out For Tak«r No "WW portending Hnrri-»a. need«* tk,. week for tba ABBOMBcsmeat of a foar Aey keUdey Th«r^y, Friday. Seterday, and Snnday. The PU-ïïnm fathers took care of that. Classes will résout Monday» prerided that terkey. end West VU»““ have been dnly de- Magazine To Award PrizeForTraaslation 01 Spanish Story For the most ski!lful translation by a college student of a short story written by a Bring Latin American author, “Mademoiselle” magazine will present an award of $100. T:*e announcement of the contest is made by the Committee on Cultural Relations With Latin America, Inc. Winning translations will be printed in the magazine, and for other stories used, $50 will be given to the author and translator. Students interested in entering the contest should consult with Dr. J. Riis Owre, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and professor of Spanish. Stories must be submitted by March 1, 1943—BHB Frosh Vice-Prexy Joins Marines Freshmen will meet next Thursday to elect a new vice president. Elections will be 'held in the theatre at 1 p.m. In a letter to Seymour Simon, chief justice of the Honor court, Ed Wall this week resigned as rice president of the class because of enlistment in the U. S. Marine corps. Wall, the only M-party officer in the freshman claas, was elected two weeks ago by a vote of 88 to 86. He is a Pi Kappa Alpha pledge and a member of the freshman committee of the M-P«rty. Last Kickoff Saturday; Hurricanes Meet W. Va. Russ Coates and Ray Gorman, co-captains and only seniors on the team, will (day their last game of football for the University of Miami on Saturday, when the Hurricanes dose their 1942 season against a powerful University of West Virginia squad in the Orange Bowl. The kick-off will be at 4 ;J0. This contest will probably be the last intercollegiate football game at the University of Miami for the duration. Coaches Harding and Morris hare already an- nounced their intentions of joining the Navy when the season is over. Many of the Hurricane play-ers will also be in the armed forces before another season comes along. The Hardingmen came through their tussle with South Carolina in good shape. Bill Dixon will definitely start at the left guard position, but reports about Tuffy Sapp are not favorable. At present it looks like Lon Ferrante or Chuck Klein will start in Sapp’s place. As for the rest of the Miami team. Bob Nealon injured his hand on Saturday, but this is not serious. A1 Kasulin and Bob Me-Dougal, although suffering from muscle bruises, will be ready to go against West Virginia. The Mountaineers are directed by William Kern. Kern and Jack Harding were roomates and teammates at the University of Pittsburgh, and this accounts for the fact that the visitors use the Pitt system also. The West Virginia eleven operates from the single wing formation, which is similar to the Hurricanes. The boys from Morgantown, West Virginia, have played eight games this year and will cloae their 1942 season against the Hurricanes. They beat Washington and Lee in their opener, then lost to the powerful Boston college squad 33-0. However, "Boston college is one of the top teams in the country. The Mountaineers downed South Carolina 13-0, but dropped a decision to Fordham university by a score of 23-14. This game was closer than the score indicates, for West Virginia outplayed Ford-ham in the second half to score both of their touchdowns. This same West Virginia team stopped a determined Penn State eleven 24-0 and handed the Pennsylvanians their first loss of the season. They took Kentucky W), but lost a tight contest to Michi gan State last week, when they fumbled the pigskin in the first period. Michigan State took advantage of the opportnnity and marched sixty yards for the lone score. Miami has never met West Virginia previously. The fellow to watch on Saturday will be Dick McElwee, a 165 [COWTmUSD OH SAGS IIX] "Women In War Week” Finds Co-eds In Stop With Majority This, dear ladies, is National Women At War Week. This being so, we take the time and the space to scan the panorama of wartime activities which engage the services of women, either volunteer or paid. Women have been eager to accept work already; but more is yet to be done. A vast majority have forsaken all things they held dear before December 7th, and given of their time unstintingly and unhesitantly. They feel with the men that no price is too great. They have answered every call, every suggestion with action. Few, if any cells, for their help have gone unheeded. Their first desire is to win this war. They have through all their .many hours of grueling volunteer work, and remunerative work, kept their homes going. Again, these American women have shown the determination and resourcefulness which helped to win other wars before this one. Women ere rapidly replacing men in some work, end in the Army end in the Navy women are «■»Hug over jobs which will release men for active dsty. They ere serving their country as WAAC8 or as WAVES. Eventually some will serve as SPARS, with the Coast Guard. They ere volunteering as ualty station leaders, and Home Nurses, and Nurses Aides—there seems to be no limit to their capacity to do the work that must be done to win this war. They are giving of their time to sell War Stamps and Bonds. They are giving oi their money for the same. And at the University of Miami, the women ar,i no less conscious of their du.y to God, to Country, and the free peoples of the world. The University coeds recognize their obligations to fathera, brothers, friends, end sweethearts. They, too, are contributing their two cents to the war effort Roberta Crim seems to be the busiest volunteer r oman pus. From 1 p.m. to 8 p. Sunday she may be found at Chapman Field on duty for the American Red Crass motor corps. Other times die teaches swimming, gets in a few purls in knitting and spends hours eDer, Jeanne Susong, and Lois Pelgrim. Volunteers in the USO Acting Units have been Ruth Jane Crav-er, Charlotte Motter, Genevieve O’Keefe, Carol Jean Sheaffer, and Isabel Bayan. Yes, University of Miami women are busy. They are not content to contribute to the war effort by justifying their staying in college. They pile up hours and hours in war work. Factual statistics fail horribly to picture a complete show of what is being done. They have given liberally of their time when they could. They too have sold stamps and bonds. They have sold, and have bought USO dances have not gone wanting girls because University girls did not cooperate; the scrap metal drive profited too from their participation; likewise the Navy and the Army relief, and the American Red Cross. University women have done lot more too. Moat of what they have been doing Win go un corded. No oao wants to take the to put it down. There 1 things far more important. Uke victory gardens, and rolling Senate Takes Ariiee On Ibis Position, Hurricane Petitions Student Senate met on Tuesday and acted on two petitions and the recommendation from the University Publications board for the position of Ibis business manager. Men’s Intramural manager, John Moore, presented a petition requesting $32.00 for basketball backboard painting. Petition was tabled pending investigation by the Finance committee. Petition of the Hurricane business manager, Edison Archer, for an allotment of $50 each iasue for the publication *of the Hurricane waa defeated. The Senate passed the recommendation of the Finance committee that thia allotment be $1.60 per year for each student, based on actual enrollment. The senatorial body refused toe Publications board’s nomination of Harold Edelstein to the position of Ibis business manager, and haa referred the matter back to the board. Thia week a few of the Senators are taking a student poll on the proposed point system which has been recommended by the Organizations committee of the University. Main points found by the Investigation committee before submitting it to the student body for approval are: That the student body should consider now whether or not it chooses to install such a system —which would be directed and dictated by them. Terms of the system would restrict participation when necessary. And would set up qualifications for officers of organizations other than fraternal organizations. * It wonld also keep a student [CONTINVED OH PAOB ox) Student! To Speak At L R. C. Meeting Three student speakers will be featured at the next meeting of the International Relations club, Wednesday, Dec. 2, at 7:30 p.m. Barbara Browne will report on “Russia and the Future”; George Miller will discuss “Eider’s Second Front”; and one other member of the group will speak on the question, “How Neutral is Sweden?” The program conforms with the new policy of the ehib, alternating guest speakers with student discussions. An open forum will follow the reports. Announcement of the place of the meeting will be posted on the bnlletin boards in the Main bnild-ing.—BW Honor Coart For Brooking Cafeteria lino Numerous complaints from students and cafeteria officials concerning students breaking into line brought action from Jack Coyle, prosecuting attorney of the Honor court, on Monday. Coyle at that time “arrested” F. L. Klein, Thelma Warner, Robert Jiras, Harry Friedman, A1 Rarkin, Toni Long, and Augustus Moore for violation of cafeteria precedent. Witnesses to the infractions were law school students. Trial will be Tuesday, Dee. 8, at 4 p.m. in the Law Building courtroom, with courtroom open to the public. Defendants msy either be their own defending counsel, or may seek counsel through some other student. — MLM
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 25, 1942 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1942-11-25 |
Coverage Temporal | 1940-1949 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (14 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_19421125 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19421125 |
Digital ID | MHC_19421125_001 |
Full Text | Subject to cel] at any tine is Betty KidweQ, wht. is a volunteer in the reserve ambulance corps. Plane spotter Natalie Frenkel spends four hours s week with her duties. Merle Blount spends much of her free tine at the filter center at her observation poet. Likewise Etna Norton, Betty Bateh- OF MIAMI ¡Accordance with President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s request (December 7 be kept sacred throughout the nation, faculty, and navigation cadets will celebrate that day with a mOi-gtview and “Remember Pearl Harbor” meeting in the tennis MIAMI. riCIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION • UNIVERSITY NOMEMBER 25. 1942 NO. 10 will be excused at s Research »y Scientists G. Walton Smith, iot of zoology at the has been awarded a the outstanding re-of 1941 by the Flor-of Sciences. The ____it was made at a following the society's on Saturday, Not. last year’s Academy Dr. Smith read several based on investigations with marine zoology ear-in South Florida and in jus. The articles include: ___ and Mode of Transmis- ef the 1939 and 1940 Sponge tatity,” “Madreporaria (coral the Miami Area,” and "A Apparatus for Determining By Tolerances in Marine Or- I sponge mortality of 1939 1940 ruined a five million and Dr. Smith's . thus have commer- ____ The apparatus dis- by the professor in one of is his own invention. i Rationing at Debate that kiss-rationing able, unnecessary since no shortage, un-Ameri-we it would lower mo-a potential ruination of dty, a Delta Zeta team I representatives from the staff in the intramural ala yesterday afternoon —_ the negative on the . (Resolved: that the Uni-ef Miami administration I ration kissing for the dura-ware Muriel Copinna and JBtripiing. Edison Archer y Weiner, basing their i on the conservation of materials, pleaded for sed rationing. Is-for the affirmative was red has gone to war." i Zetas fought the ration the grounds of uneon-iity. “Freedom of wor-I freedom of the press are in the constitution, fs n kiss without a was their motto. I^were awarded both ed victorious from ths ’ debates Monday i rs-up were Kappa * Alpha Epsilon Phi. of the event w Debate couneQ. ■w»s in charge of ar •¡»eulty members n were Dr. C. Dr. H. Fr > Dr. Harold 11 a.m. to see the review on the main field in which University students in the marine, army, army air force, and naval reserves, as well aa all cadets studying here, will participate. Exercises of war emphasis win follow immediately in the tennis stadium with Dr. Louis K. Manley as the principal speaker. Sitting on the speaker’s platform win be the heads of the armed service work here: Capt. Fred R. Merritt, of the U. S. Army Air Force Training detachment; Lt. Comm. T. C. Brownell, U. S. Navy; and Capt. Charles Lund, Pan American Airways. The program is nnder the direction of Dean of Women Mary B. Merritt and Dean of Men Foster E. Alter, and is sponsored by the Student War Council as part of its effort to make students more war conscious. A survey is being made by the council to determine accurately the extent of student war effort. In addition to this woTk, its members are planning fire and air raid drills, and will continue its war bond and stamp drive begun by co-eds this week. Classes will be resumed at 1 p.m.—BHB S narks Name Two Freshmen In New Membership Ruling Admitting freshmen for the first time as a regular part of their process, Snarks, the creative writers’ honorary, chose two new members at a meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Natalie Grimes Lawrence, faculty sponsor. Rodney Winfield and Lester Moore were the two chosen under the new ruling.—DAL No School TIR Monday; Thao Out For Tak«r No "WW portending Hnrri-»a. need«* tk,. week for tba ABBOMBcsmeat of a foar Aey keUdey Th«r^y, Friday. Seterday, and Snnday. The PU-ïïnm fathers took care of that. Classes will résout Monday» prerided that terkey. end West VU»““ have been dnly de- Magazine To Award PrizeForTraaslation 01 Spanish Story For the most ski!lful translation by a college student of a short story written by a Bring Latin American author, “Mademoiselle” magazine will present an award of $100. T:*e announcement of the contest is made by the Committee on Cultural Relations With Latin America, Inc. Winning translations will be printed in the magazine, and for other stories used, $50 will be given to the author and translator. Students interested in entering the contest should consult with Dr. J. Riis Owre, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and professor of Spanish. Stories must be submitted by March 1, 1943—BHB Frosh Vice-Prexy Joins Marines Freshmen will meet next Thursday to elect a new vice president. Elections will be 'held in the theatre at 1 p.m. In a letter to Seymour Simon, chief justice of the Honor court, Ed Wall this week resigned as rice president of the class because of enlistment in the U. S. Marine corps. Wall, the only M-party officer in the freshman claas, was elected two weeks ago by a vote of 88 to 86. He is a Pi Kappa Alpha pledge and a member of the freshman committee of the M-P«rty. Last Kickoff Saturday; Hurricanes Meet W. Va. Russ Coates and Ray Gorman, co-captains and only seniors on the team, will (day their last game of football for the University of Miami on Saturday, when the Hurricanes dose their 1942 season against a powerful University of West Virginia squad in the Orange Bowl. The kick-off will be at 4 ;J0. This contest will probably be the last intercollegiate football game at the University of Miami for the duration. Coaches Harding and Morris hare already an- nounced their intentions of joining the Navy when the season is over. Many of the Hurricane play-ers will also be in the armed forces before another season comes along. The Hardingmen came through their tussle with South Carolina in good shape. Bill Dixon will definitely start at the left guard position, but reports about Tuffy Sapp are not favorable. At present it looks like Lon Ferrante or Chuck Klein will start in Sapp’s place. As for the rest of the Miami team. Bob Nealon injured his hand on Saturday, but this is not serious. A1 Kasulin and Bob Me-Dougal, although suffering from muscle bruises, will be ready to go against West Virginia. The Mountaineers are directed by William Kern. Kern and Jack Harding were roomates and teammates at the University of Pittsburgh, and this accounts for the fact that the visitors use the Pitt system also. The West Virginia eleven operates from the single wing formation, which is similar to the Hurricanes. The boys from Morgantown, West Virginia, have played eight games this year and will cloae their 1942 season against the Hurricanes. They beat Washington and Lee in their opener, then lost to the powerful Boston college squad 33-0. However, "Boston college is one of the top teams in the country. The Mountaineers downed South Carolina 13-0, but dropped a decision to Fordham university by a score of 23-14. This game was closer than the score indicates, for West Virginia outplayed Ford-ham in the second half to score both of their touchdowns. This same West Virginia team stopped a determined Penn State eleven 24-0 and handed the Pennsylvanians their first loss of the season. They took Kentucky W), but lost a tight contest to Michi gan State last week, when they fumbled the pigskin in the first period. Michigan State took advantage of the opportnnity and marched sixty yards for the lone score. Miami has never met West Virginia previously. The fellow to watch on Saturday will be Dick McElwee, a 165 [COWTmUSD OH SAGS IIX] "Women In War Week” Finds Co-eds In Stop With Majority This, dear ladies, is National Women At War Week. This being so, we take the time and the space to scan the panorama of wartime activities which engage the services of women, either volunteer or paid. Women have been eager to accept work already; but more is yet to be done. A vast majority have forsaken all things they held dear before December 7th, and given of their time unstintingly and unhesitantly. They feel with the men that no price is too great. They have answered every call, every suggestion with action. Few, if any cells, for their help have gone unheeded. Their first desire is to win this war. They have through all their .many hours of grueling volunteer work, and remunerative work, kept their homes going. Again, these American women have shown the determination and resourcefulness which helped to win other wars before this one. Women ere rapidly replacing men in some work, end in the Army end in the Navy women are «■»Hug over jobs which will release men for active dsty. They ere serving their country as WAAC8 or as WAVES. Eventually some will serve as SPARS, with the Coast Guard. They ere volunteering as ualty station leaders, and Home Nurses, and Nurses Aides—there seems to be no limit to their capacity to do the work that must be done to win this war. They are giving of their time to sell War Stamps and Bonds. They are giving oi their money for the same. And at the University of Miami, the women ar,i no less conscious of their du.y to God, to Country, and the free peoples of the world. The University coeds recognize their obligations to fathera, brothers, friends, end sweethearts. They, too, are contributing their two cents to the war effort Roberta Crim seems to be the busiest volunteer r oman pus. From 1 p.m. to 8 p. Sunday she may be found at Chapman Field on duty for the American Red Crass motor corps. Other times die teaches swimming, gets in a few purls in knitting and spends hours eDer, Jeanne Susong, and Lois Pelgrim. Volunteers in the USO Acting Units have been Ruth Jane Crav-er, Charlotte Motter, Genevieve O’Keefe, Carol Jean Sheaffer, and Isabel Bayan. Yes, University of Miami women are busy. They are not content to contribute to the war effort by justifying their staying in college. They pile up hours and hours in war work. Factual statistics fail horribly to picture a complete show of what is being done. They have given liberally of their time when they could. They too have sold stamps and bonds. They have sold, and have bought USO dances have not gone wanting girls because University girls did not cooperate; the scrap metal drive profited too from their participation; likewise the Navy and the Army relief, and the American Red Cross. University women have done lot more too. Moat of what they have been doing Win go un corded. No oao wants to take the to put it down. There 1 things far more important. Uke victory gardens, and rolling Senate Takes Ariiee On Ibis Position, Hurricane Petitions Student Senate met on Tuesday and acted on two petitions and the recommendation from the University Publications board for the position of Ibis business manager. Men’s Intramural manager, John Moore, presented a petition requesting $32.00 for basketball backboard painting. Petition was tabled pending investigation by the Finance committee. Petition of the Hurricane business manager, Edison Archer, for an allotment of $50 each iasue for the publication *of the Hurricane waa defeated. The Senate passed the recommendation of the Finance committee that thia allotment be $1.60 per year for each student, based on actual enrollment. The senatorial body refused toe Publications board’s nomination of Harold Edelstein to the position of Ibis business manager, and haa referred the matter back to the board. Thia week a few of the Senators are taking a student poll on the proposed point system which has been recommended by the Organizations committee of the University. Main points found by the Investigation committee before submitting it to the student body for approval are: That the student body should consider now whether or not it chooses to install such a system —which would be directed and dictated by them. Terms of the system would restrict participation when necessary. And would set up qualifications for officers of organizations other than fraternal organizations. * It wonld also keep a student [CONTINVED OH PAOB ox) Student! To Speak At L R. C. Meeting Three student speakers will be featured at the next meeting of the International Relations club, Wednesday, Dec. 2, at 7:30 p.m. Barbara Browne will report on “Russia and the Future”; George Miller will discuss “Eider’s Second Front”; and one other member of the group will speak on the question, “How Neutral is Sweden?” The program conforms with the new policy of the ehib, alternating guest speakers with student discussions. An open forum will follow the reports. Announcement of the place of the meeting will be posted on the bnlletin boards in the Main bnild-ing.—BW Honor Coart For Brooking Cafeteria lino Numerous complaints from students and cafeteria officials concerning students breaking into line brought action from Jack Coyle, prosecuting attorney of the Honor court, on Monday. Coyle at that time “arrested” F. L. Klein, Thelma Warner, Robert Jiras, Harry Friedman, A1 Rarkin, Toni Long, and Augustus Moore for violation of cafeteria precedent. Witnesses to the infractions were law school students. Trial will be Tuesday, Dee. 8, at 4 p.m. in the Law Building courtroom, with courtroom open to the public. Defendants msy either be their own defending counsel, or may seek counsel through some other student. — MLM |
Archive | MHC_19421125_001.tif |
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