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an American citizen. He organized the Cincinnati Municipal Band, of which he was conductor for several years. A member of the University of California Music faculty during 1923-24, Aloo won the degree of Doe- Don Chadderdon read a recommendation from- the administration for the reorganization of the “M” Book, student handbook. He revealed that a bül for expenses incurred in the printing of the 1941 "M” Book would be presented to Hie senate for payment in the near future. Discussion on the matter' was tabled until the bill is presented. Singsong Will Be Feature Of Thursday Assembly A singsong program, in whieh students will participate in community singing of school songs, old favorites, and popular ballads, wffl be held Thursday at 11:00 in rance and was of thè Cuban »g his yen» in States. A noted Ut is an ardent i*s rights. She i to receive thè en Filosofia y ivj AIW w vu • tor of Pedagogy. Since leaving the University he has traveled in Europe and has conducted major symphony orchestras all over the 60 During the summer sessions of 1988-1941, Aloo has beer a umm-bcr of the mnsie department at 'he University of low«. , A motion to recall the loan of 8860 given the junior class to help finance their prom died for want of a second after much discussion was held. before Collection 1 Starts Friday Collection of the ----* of $1.00 gill begin tomorrow. Honor court >|rv__ aided by Alpha Phi frng., wifi set up a table in the patie near the athletic office for Oat purpose. Collections will con-gam all next week to awry student to pay his More than eighty per cent of fra ngnlarly enrolled students far the assessment in the election held last and Friday. There were east. 727 at and 32 cast spinsi it Theta Alpha Phi„ Begins Casting For Annual Follies “Drama Through the Ages,” opted in burlesque form, will be the theme of the annual Theta Alpha Phi Follies to be given this r in the auditorium of the Cent Gables Elementary School, April 11, at 8 p.m. Tryouts fur the specialty num-bos on the program will be held Friday afternoon from 8 to 5 p.m. is the Cardboard Theater. The Hurricane Chorus, made up of Mi-i U football players, has already been engaged to appear as t feature of the show. Ssrorities and fraternities will pnmut skits in competition for the plaque to be given to the sor-l-IBIS FIX ority sad fraternity having the mart original and effectively ex-tod idea. Each group will relent Some peridd in the history of drama. Original music for the show is ■* written by Snuffy Smyth« aid Graham Miller. Glenn Miller, pictured with vocalist Marion Hutton, will serenade the University of Miami over CBS on the Chesterfield Moonlight Serenade next Wednesday, March 18 at 10 p.m. One number will be dedicated to the local Pi Chi fraternity in honor of its installation as the 99th chapter of Sigma Chi March 20-21. Lttad and Ink Breaks Tradition, Pledges Twelve In Special Ceremony Shattering precedents of previous years, Lead and Ink, honorary 'journalistic society, Upped twelve member Wednesday and will hold them for a pledging period. Special pledge-medallions and restrictions have been arranged, and initiation will be held some time next week. In previous "ears Lead ♦and Ink members were listed by name in Honors Assembly with no additional requirements made. New members to be initiated are Barbara Neblett, Lloyd Canter, Marshall Simmons, Evalyn Daniel, Helen Gwinn, Marvin Goldman, Thelma Hall, Ed Feigin, Hal Barkas, and Manfred Berliner. Memberships will be awarded to Jack Kendall and Hal Leibman, both of whom are now in the United States army. group pletore* for the IbU will bo taken Tuesday io tho patio. Freshman oro echsdaUd for 11 o'clock; sophomore* for 11:30. Aoy loft-ovor organizatioo pictures may aleo bo made at this boor. Camila Urena To Spook Tonight; Jimenez Next On Hispanic Program Gumía Henríquez Ureña speaks at tonight’s session of the Hispanic hutitnte on “Women in Hispanic-American Literature.” Her lecture r afternoon concerns “The Contemporary Hispanic-American Its Social Significa nee.” Joan Ramón Jiménez, who opened the first sessions of the Institute, again Monday, March lfi'f » “Suecesión de la democracia,” by Mr. Sidney May-ssri. Zacharie de Baralt, JO* author, lecturer, and so, •dentist, speaks Tuesday and Wednesday evening José Marti, the great Cuban • Drena, who speaks tonight, 1 accomplished linguist and I educator. She holds doctor-Pa both Philosophy and Edu-from the University of later continued her University of Paris, at Vassar in Cuba, lectured at continents, featured was F of during his States. A is has lectured many American colleges as well as the League for Political Education in New York and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes Sociales in Paris. Student Senate Doles Out 85000 Student senators, acting upon recommendations of the financial committee, appropriated oyer $5000 ^publications and athletics last Tuesday. The 1942 Ibis was awarded 83.00 per student and the athletic tiim/t was swelled hv a like sum. Instructor Added To Music Faculty Modesto Aloo, Belgian instrumentalist and teacher of music in this country and in Europe, will arrive in Miami next week to join the University music faculty as instructor in brass instruments. A graduate of Verviera Conservatory of Music and the Royal Conservatory at Brussels, Aloo came to this country* in 1010 when he joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra as trombonist under Dr. Karl Much. He left this position in 1918 to become associate conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra under Eugene Ysaye. The same year he became citizen. the Cincinnati Theta Alpha Stages 'Royal Family’ Curtain time is at 8:30 tonight for “The Royal Family,” Kaufman ber’s burlesque of the Barrymores, to be presented in the as the annual production for Theta Alpha Phi, honorary temity. Performances will be repeated Friday and Sat-Opal Euard Motter is director. Because of limited stage space,! sunken living room si-been designed by tech-director Charles Philhour instead of the original two-story A life size portrait of Sir Aubrey Cavendish has been painted for the set by Betsy Diller and Julia Arthur, members of Delta Tau Alpha, honorary Art frater- Students taking part in the play are Barbara Willock, Manuel Roth, Walden Getzman, Lowell Veach, Mary Alice Girton, Shirley Goldston, Evelyn Ausländer, Betty Batchellor, Herbert Maltz, Sidney Cassell, Beatrice Collins, William Diamant, and Dick Mot-ter. Charlotte Motter is property mistress. Frosh Pick Head. Plan For Frolics Election of the president of the freshman class will precede discussion ol Freshman Frolics plans at a meeting in the Theatre, Tuesday at 11. James Richardson, former vice president, is the only nominee so far. Members of the Honor Court will conduct the election. Committee chairmen for the Frolics will be selected from students present at that meeting. Date of the show has not been set, but it will take place early in May. Talent for the annual affair, will come from the freshman class and will be directed by faculty members. ShapleighMusic To Be Heard For First Time As its first performance in America, two movements from the symphonic suite “Gur Amir” by the American composer Bertram Shapleigh will be played by the University symphony orchestra Monday night. Guiomar No-vaes, Brazilian pianist, will appear as soloist with the orchestra in its concert at Miami high school. Shapleigh, a native of Massachusetts now living in Washington, has had his works played and well received in London, including the selection on Monday night’s program. Miss Novaes, accompanied by Mr. Bitter and the orchestra, will play the Concerto in A minor for Piano and Orchestra by Robert Schumann. For its major work of the evening, the orchestra will offer Beethoven’s Eighth Symphony. Recently Miss Novaes made a tour of Brazil, playing in scores of cities which had never before heard a symphony orchestra. This tour began a movement entitled "Cultures Artisticas” which was to organize community concert courses similar to those in the United States. With Giomar Novaes as its active head, the movement has continued under the sponsorship of the Brazilian government. Alter. O'Day To Lead Conga Line At M-Club's Cafeteria Dance Friday “Fos” Alter and “Biff” O’Day will lead a hot conga line of professors at the “M” club dance tomorrow night in the cafeteria from ten till one if committee plans meet faculty approval. Red Thornton, cartoonist from Jimmy’s, will be another attraction presented by M.C. “Kutch” Kearns. An eleven piece Phi Mu Alpha swing band will play for this affair at which Navy boxers from Key West and their coach, Robert Downes, former faculty member, will be honor guests. In charge of arrangements are “Punchy” Adler, chairman, Russ Coates, and Ray Gorman, who replaces gone-with-the-draft Nick Broker. Others on the committee are Walter Watt, decorations; A1 Kasulin, tickets; Lew Price, publicity; Larose Arrington, Eddie Hurr, and Norm Wayne, signs. Coaches Harding and Morris -and their wives will chaperone the affair. Admission is fifty-five cents. Will Be Feature Assembly in which in Campus Calendar Friday, March 13, 7 p.m. Zeta Tau Alpha Initiation, 707 Escobar Avenne 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. “M” Club Dance, Cafeteria. Saturday, March 14, 6:30 p.m. Sigma Kappa Initiation, 622 Velarde Avenue 7 p.m. Zeta Tau Alpha Initiation Banquet, Coral Gables Country Club Sunday, March 15, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mu Beta Sigma Trip to Key Biscayne 3 p.m. Delta Zeta Initiation, 1790 S.W. 15 Street 7 p.m. Delta Zeta Banquet, Seven Seas 8 p.m.- Concert, Granada Bldg. Monday, March 18, 12 n. Women’s Athletic Council, Social Hall 7:80 to 8:15 p.m. Defense Picture, Theatre Tuesday, March 17, 11 a.m. Freshman Meeting, Theatre 11 a.m. Alpha Phi Omega, Social Hall 5:80 p.m. Episcopal Student League, Social Hall 7 p.m. Alpha Kappa Pei, Social Wen March IS, 5:30 to 7:80 p.m. Y.W.C.A., Social Hall Number 22
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 12, 1942 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1942-03-12 |
Coverage Temporal | 1940-1949 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (16 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_19420312 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19420312 |
Digital ID | MHC_19420312_001 |
Full Text | an American citizen. He organized the Cincinnati Municipal Band, of which he was conductor for several years. A member of the University of California Music faculty during 1923-24, Aloo won the degree of Doe- Don Chadderdon read a recommendation from- the administration for the reorganization of the “M” Book, student handbook. He revealed that a bül for expenses incurred in the printing of the 1941 "M” Book would be presented to Hie senate for payment in the near future. Discussion on the matter' was tabled until the bill is presented. Singsong Will Be Feature Of Thursday Assembly A singsong program, in whieh students will participate in community singing of school songs, old favorites, and popular ballads, wffl be held Thursday at 11:00 in rance and was of thè Cuban »g his yen» in States. A noted Ut is an ardent i*s rights. She i to receive thè en Filosofia y ivj AIW w vu • tor of Pedagogy. Since leaving the University he has traveled in Europe and has conducted major symphony orchestras all over the 60 During the summer sessions of 1988-1941, Aloo has beer a umm-bcr of the mnsie department at 'he University of low«. , A motion to recall the loan of 8860 given the junior class to help finance their prom died for want of a second after much discussion was held. before Collection 1 Starts Friday Collection of the ----* of $1.00 gill begin tomorrow. Honor court >|rv__ aided by Alpha Phi frng., wifi set up a table in the patie near the athletic office for Oat purpose. Collections will con-gam all next week to awry student to pay his More than eighty per cent of fra ngnlarly enrolled students far the assessment in the election held last and Friday. There were east. 727 at and 32 cast spinsi it Theta Alpha Phi„ Begins Casting For Annual Follies “Drama Through the Ages,” opted in burlesque form, will be the theme of the annual Theta Alpha Phi Follies to be given this r in the auditorium of the Cent Gables Elementary School, April 11, at 8 p.m. Tryouts fur the specialty num-bos on the program will be held Friday afternoon from 8 to 5 p.m. is the Cardboard Theater. The Hurricane Chorus, made up of Mi-i U football players, has already been engaged to appear as t feature of the show. Ssrorities and fraternities will pnmut skits in competition for the plaque to be given to the sor-l-IBIS FIX ority sad fraternity having the mart original and effectively ex-tod idea. Each group will relent Some peridd in the history of drama. Original music for the show is ■* written by Snuffy Smyth« aid Graham Miller. Glenn Miller, pictured with vocalist Marion Hutton, will serenade the University of Miami over CBS on the Chesterfield Moonlight Serenade next Wednesday, March 18 at 10 p.m. One number will be dedicated to the local Pi Chi fraternity in honor of its installation as the 99th chapter of Sigma Chi March 20-21. Lttad and Ink Breaks Tradition, Pledges Twelve In Special Ceremony Shattering precedents of previous years, Lead and Ink, honorary 'journalistic society, Upped twelve member Wednesday and will hold them for a pledging period. Special pledge-medallions and restrictions have been arranged, and initiation will be held some time next week. In previous "ears Lead ♦and Ink members were listed by name in Honors Assembly with no additional requirements made. New members to be initiated are Barbara Neblett, Lloyd Canter, Marshall Simmons, Evalyn Daniel, Helen Gwinn, Marvin Goldman, Thelma Hall, Ed Feigin, Hal Barkas, and Manfred Berliner. Memberships will be awarded to Jack Kendall and Hal Leibman, both of whom are now in the United States army. group pletore* for the IbU will bo taken Tuesday io tho patio. Freshman oro echsdaUd for 11 o'clock; sophomore* for 11:30. Aoy loft-ovor organizatioo pictures may aleo bo made at this boor. Camila Urena To Spook Tonight; Jimenez Next On Hispanic Program Gumía Henríquez Ureña speaks at tonight’s session of the Hispanic hutitnte on “Women in Hispanic-American Literature.” Her lecture r afternoon concerns “The Contemporary Hispanic-American Its Social Significa nee.” Joan Ramón Jiménez, who opened the first sessions of the Institute, again Monday, March lfi'f » “Suecesión de la democracia,” by Mr. Sidney May-ssri. Zacharie de Baralt, JO* author, lecturer, and so, •dentist, speaks Tuesday and Wednesday evening José Marti, the great Cuban • Drena, who speaks tonight, 1 accomplished linguist and I educator. She holds doctor-Pa both Philosophy and Edu-from the University of later continued her University of Paris, at Vassar in Cuba, lectured at continents, featured was F of during his States. A is has lectured many American colleges as well as the League for Political Education in New York and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes Sociales in Paris. Student Senate Doles Out 85000 Student senators, acting upon recommendations of the financial committee, appropriated oyer $5000 ^publications and athletics last Tuesday. The 1942 Ibis was awarded 83.00 per student and the athletic tiim/t was swelled hv a like sum. Instructor Added To Music Faculty Modesto Aloo, Belgian instrumentalist and teacher of music in this country and in Europe, will arrive in Miami next week to join the University music faculty as instructor in brass instruments. A graduate of Verviera Conservatory of Music and the Royal Conservatory at Brussels, Aloo came to this country* in 1010 when he joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra as trombonist under Dr. Karl Much. He left this position in 1918 to become associate conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra under Eugene Ysaye. The same year he became citizen. the Cincinnati Theta Alpha Stages 'Royal Family’ Curtain time is at 8:30 tonight for “The Royal Family,” Kaufman ber’s burlesque of the Barrymores, to be presented in the as the annual production for Theta Alpha Phi, honorary temity. Performances will be repeated Friday and Sat-Opal Euard Motter is director. Because of limited stage space,! sunken living room si-been designed by tech-director Charles Philhour instead of the original two-story A life size portrait of Sir Aubrey Cavendish has been painted for the set by Betsy Diller and Julia Arthur, members of Delta Tau Alpha, honorary Art frater- Students taking part in the play are Barbara Willock, Manuel Roth, Walden Getzman, Lowell Veach, Mary Alice Girton, Shirley Goldston, Evelyn Ausländer, Betty Batchellor, Herbert Maltz, Sidney Cassell, Beatrice Collins, William Diamant, and Dick Mot-ter. Charlotte Motter is property mistress. Frosh Pick Head. Plan For Frolics Election of the president of the freshman class will precede discussion ol Freshman Frolics plans at a meeting in the Theatre, Tuesday at 11. James Richardson, former vice president, is the only nominee so far. Members of the Honor Court will conduct the election. Committee chairmen for the Frolics will be selected from students present at that meeting. Date of the show has not been set, but it will take place early in May. Talent for the annual affair, will come from the freshman class and will be directed by faculty members. ShapleighMusic To Be Heard For First Time As its first performance in America, two movements from the symphonic suite “Gur Amir” by the American composer Bertram Shapleigh will be played by the University symphony orchestra Monday night. Guiomar No-vaes, Brazilian pianist, will appear as soloist with the orchestra in its concert at Miami high school. Shapleigh, a native of Massachusetts now living in Washington, has had his works played and well received in London, including the selection on Monday night’s program. Miss Novaes, accompanied by Mr. Bitter and the orchestra, will play the Concerto in A minor for Piano and Orchestra by Robert Schumann. For its major work of the evening, the orchestra will offer Beethoven’s Eighth Symphony. Recently Miss Novaes made a tour of Brazil, playing in scores of cities which had never before heard a symphony orchestra. This tour began a movement entitled "Cultures Artisticas” which was to organize community concert courses similar to those in the United States. With Giomar Novaes as its active head, the movement has continued under the sponsorship of the Brazilian government. Alter. O'Day To Lead Conga Line At M-Club's Cafeteria Dance Friday “Fos” Alter and “Biff” O’Day will lead a hot conga line of professors at the “M” club dance tomorrow night in the cafeteria from ten till one if committee plans meet faculty approval. Red Thornton, cartoonist from Jimmy’s, will be another attraction presented by M.C. “Kutch” Kearns. An eleven piece Phi Mu Alpha swing band will play for this affair at which Navy boxers from Key West and their coach, Robert Downes, former faculty member, will be honor guests. In charge of arrangements are “Punchy” Adler, chairman, Russ Coates, and Ray Gorman, who replaces gone-with-the-draft Nick Broker. Others on the committee are Walter Watt, decorations; A1 Kasulin, tickets; Lew Price, publicity; Larose Arrington, Eddie Hurr, and Norm Wayne, signs. Coaches Harding and Morris -and their wives will chaperone the affair. Admission is fifty-five cents. Will Be Feature Assembly in which in Campus Calendar Friday, March 13, 7 p.m. Zeta Tau Alpha Initiation, 707 Escobar Avenne 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. “M” Club Dance, Cafeteria. Saturday, March 14, 6:30 p.m. Sigma Kappa Initiation, 622 Velarde Avenue 7 p.m. Zeta Tau Alpha Initiation Banquet, Coral Gables Country Club Sunday, March 15, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mu Beta Sigma Trip to Key Biscayne 3 p.m. Delta Zeta Initiation, 1790 S.W. 15 Street 7 p.m. Delta Zeta Banquet, Seven Seas 8 p.m.- Concert, Granada Bldg. Monday, March 18, 12 n. Women’s Athletic Council, Social Hall 7:80 to 8:15 p.m. Defense Picture, Theatre Tuesday, March 17, 11 a.m. Freshman Meeting, Theatre 11 a.m. Alpha Phi Omega, Social Hall 5:80 p.m. Episcopal Student League, Social Hall 7 p.m. Alpha Kappa Pei, Social Wen March IS, 5:30 to 7:80 p.m. Y.W.C.A., Social Hall Number 22 |
Archive | MHC_19420312_001.tif |
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