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Exclusive Read about the Dade County political machine, see p. 5 Voi. 47, No. 24 Friday, January 7, 1972 Hauser To Speak To Grads (UMNB) — Rita E. Hauser, United States Representative to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and member of the U.S. delegation to the 24th United Nations General Assembly, will be the UM’s commencement speaker Wednesday, January 26. A noted attorney, Mrs. Hauser will give the address at ceremonies for approximately 950 degree candidates beginning at 10:30 a.m. at Dade County Auditorium. Her topic is “From Here to The Next Millenium.” UM President Henry King Stanford will confer the degrees, ranging from the baccalaureate through the doctorate. The President’s Commencement Reception for the degree candidates, their families and friends will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, January 25, at the Lowe Art Museum, main campus. The annual Trustees Luncheon will be held at the Whitten Memorial Student Union following commencement ceremonies. Mrs. Hauser received her A. B. degree, with highest honors, from Hunter College in 1954. She received a Doctorate in Political Economy, with highest honors, from the University of Strasbourg, France, in 1955; her LL.B. degree following study at Harvard and New York University Law Schools, in 1958; and her License en droit (French LL.B.), with highest honors. University of Paris Law Faculty, also in 1958. She served as Attorney, Appellate Section, Tax Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, 1959-60; is a partner in the firm of Moldover Hauser Strauss & Volin, New York City, and has been in general practice of law since 1960, specializing in private international and foreign law matters. She is author of numerous publications and serves on committees of various bar associations. She is married to Gustave M. Hauser, vice president, General Telephone & Electronics International, Inc. They have two children. UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI 14-44AU7 * 1972 Editorials Rocky Walters dis-:usses UM personalities, iee p. 5. Senate Reallocation Hita Hauser . .. ml<lre*»e» forati» —Hurrican« Photo bv SUNSHINE Workmen Clear Off Pavement With Air-Hammer ... os fir on it d Ureakinft crremonir* are held today HKS Breaks For Gautier Ground ’Shelter By MARK TARGE Hurrican« Reporter Ground-breaking ceremonies for the UM Rathskeller will be held today, at 12:15 in the Student Union's west parking lot. | The Rathskeller, scheduled for completion in early September, will be a gathering place where students, faculty, and Administration can meet to talk and exchange ideas. The Rathskeller will be open to all members of the UM community 18 years or over, but only those 21 or over will be permitted to purchase alcoholic beverages. When completed, it will accommodate about 550 people within its one-story octagonal structure and its second level mezzanine. The Rathskeller will he named in honor of the late Charles H. Gautier, a UM trustee who served as chairman of the student affairs committee of the UM board of trustees. Honored guests will be his widow, Mrs. Margaret Gautier, and members of the family. Speakers will include President Henry King Stanford, Tom Rebel, a graduate student who is chairman of the Rathskeller Advisory Board, and Coral Gables Mayor and UM alumnus Keith W. Phillips. Today’s events will be a short official ceremony. Actual groundbreaking took place on Wednesday when a construction fence was put up in the Union parking lot. “The fence will take up 98 parking spaces, and will probably be a temporary inconvenience during construction, but we ask that students bear with us,” William Sheeder, director of student activities said. “Tom Rebel, a graduate student who is chairman of the Rathskeller Advisory Board, has really been the chief student behind all of this. He deserves a lot of the credit,” Sheeder said. "I feel really pleased on behalf of the students," Rebel said, “it was a great cooperative effort on behalf of the University. A lot of people deserve credit, but it was the students who paid for it, the students who supported it, and the students who need it. I’m as happy as I can be.” The idea of an on-campus Rathskeller, where beer and wine would be served, has been under consideration for several years. Final approval of the Rathskeller came in December when it passed the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees and won approval from the Coral Gables zoning commission. Visitation May Begin This Spring By SCOTT BRESSLER Hurricane Editor The revised women’s visitation policy which was submitted by Associated Women Students (AWS) to the Board of Trustees has a chance of going into effect next semester according to Dr. William Butler, vice president for student affairs. “The Hurricane story (December 15) which said the policy was rejected by the Board was false and clearly did not reflect the spirit of the action,” Dr. Butler said. The revised policy calls for 12 hour per day visitation, seven days a week in two areas and a weekend only program in one area. The proposal was examined by the Student Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees. “The Student Affairs Committee spent many hours studying the proposal,” Dr. Butler said. "They studied it, asked administrators their opinion, several members went Into the residence halls.” The committee also held a special meeting with Security on December 1 to be briefed on "residence hall problems.” This was followed by a luncheon at the faculty Club with those involved so that the Trustees would be able to have "eyeball to eyeball contact.” The luncheon was followed by a closed door session with James Grimm, director of housing and security to ask more questions. “The Board has been more responsive to this subject than anything efiie in the three years the Student Affairs Committee turs been in existence,” Dr. Butler said. According to Dr. Butler the spirit of the action was support and hopefulness. The recommendation was In support of the visitation program with certain conditions. “A minimum security and monitoring program must be set up to safeguard students and University property,” Dr. Butler said. “Without this we will have no way of determining which individuals are drifters and which individuals are invited guests." To implement a minimum security and monitoring program additional funds are required. The Student Affairs Committee has made a request to the Budget Review Committee for additional funds to imp^ment the pro- gram for the spring semester. “I can’t second guess hut the committee has taken formal action,” Dr. Butler said. “I am hopeful that somehow the Continued On Page 2 By DF.BBIE SAMUELSON Of Th« Hurricane Staff The UM Student Senate voted unanimously Monday to validate, recommend and endorse December’s referendum in which the Student Body voted to reallocate the $3.00 portion of the student activity fee being set aside for a future fieldhouse and redirect the money toward student services. The result of the referendum, passed by the students by a 4-1 margin, will be sent with the senate's endorsement to the Student Affairs office, then to the UM Budget Committee and then to the Board of Trustees for final approval. Sami Burstyn, SBG Vice President said he hoped the Board of Trustees would act quickly. “Now that the results are in, the turnout should have little effect hecause of the wide margin. I urge Dr. Butler and the Board of Trustees to move on this matter as quickly as possible,” Burstyn said. Burstyn said that 815 students voted for reallocation in December while last spring 1279 students voted to allocate the original funds to the fieldhouse. Both figures represented a small per cent of eligible voters. "Reallocation was passed 4-1 as opposed to the 2-1 vote for allocation last June,” Burstyn said. Burstyn said all funds will be budgeted before being given to the organizations they were voted to. He said it is important to the organizations that funds are received soon. “The need for these funds is very ureent in every area. The Hurricane will stop printing in March, and WVUM will go off the air,” Burstyn said. “The faculty evaluation report will be impossible unless we reallocate the funds within the next month.” Burstyn said that once the trustees vote for reallocation the funds should be available immediately because the funds are already here. Burstyn said that he still recognizes a need for a field-house. “I definitely recognize a need for a fieldhouse and many students do also. I remind Dr. Butler and the Board that this referendum doesn’t demonstrate any lack of desire for a fieldhouse, it merely demonstrates the futility of trying to build a fieldhouse this way.” Students voted last spring ’ to allocate $3.00 per student activity fee for ten years for the building of a fieldhouse. “At the end of that time there would still only be Continued On Page 2 Fieldhouse Ileiurits REFERENDA ITEMS : !■ OFFICIAL FALL 1971-72 ELECTION RESULTS (elections held Dac.lJ, A U, 1971) Dn vnu favor rrquiriOR SAC executive officer» (Pre»ldent, viee-Preiident, Treasurer end Secretary) havin* to demoostrate financial need before recelvioR any form of financial remuneration? /YES\ NO \653/ 141 Do you favor revoking the and reapportioning it? $3.00 atudent activity fee fieldhouse fund allocation /TiS\ NO \646 ) 159 A - $1.00 to the Board of Publication» (Hurricane, Ibia, Truck)? /'IfÉS'N NO V 570 J 1»3 A - $.30 to Radio Station WVUM? C - $.45 to the development of 'YES' a professional legal aid ppoRram? !S' 540 NO 177 NO 220 D - $.25 to SBC. for the establishment of a continuous drug prevention and rehabilitation program? E - $.15 to the SBC faculty evaluation program7 F - $.10 to the open door program? C - $.05 to the voter registration and electoral $.25 to the SBG contingency fund? v530, /yes') V4 9sJ ■5«y NO 235 NO 255 NO 189 “'“I YES 355 programa? NO 244 N(T' c372J t • $.45 to ha permanently delated from atudent activity let collection? f'VESN NO \514 / 212 3 Do you approve of Freshmen resident cars on campus? students being permitted to maintain YES /1fO\ 388 V 423 j 4 - Do you favor the University maintaining a 24-hour atuddy center in the library for the two weeks prior to and the one week of, final exams? Do you favor extending the Monday through Thursday until midnight? NO 78 library hour* NO 83 THF* ABOVE REFERENDA RESULTS ARE DECLARED 0FF1ÇIÀL BY THE SBG ELECTION COMMISSION. Ms. Chisholm Announces Candidacy In 1972 By JILL H. MOVSHIN Hurrican# Women'» Editor The Honorable Shirley Chisholm, first Black Congresswoman in the United States, came to UM Tuesday morning to announce her candidacy for the presidency of the United States. Ms. Chisholm, campaiging under the slogan of "Un-hought and Unbossed” arrived on campus earlier than expected and spoke to a small crowd of supporters and bystanders. Elected to the 91st Congress, her constituency is New York’s Twelfth Congressional District. It’s center, Bedford Stuyvesant, is New York’s and perhaps the nation's, largest ghetto. A strong supporter of education, Ms. Chisholm made an unprecedented move of placing an amendment in Congress to remove her name from two committees Hon. Ms. Chisholm . .. '’unhoufiht, unho»»ed' she did not feel were directly related to her district’s problems. She was assigned instead to the House Education and Labor Committee which is her main field of interest and concentration. She serves on the Select Education, General Education and Agricultural Labor Subcommittees. The Congresswoman is also chairman of the Military Affairs Committee of the Congressional Black Caucus. At the Rock, Ms. Chisholm said that what America needs to initiate effective change, is a coalition of all said that ft did not have to happen. Ms. Chisholm said, what made it happen was the repression and stifling of dissent in America. Because of this stifling of dissent, when anyone tries to dissent, there is a move to stop it, Ms. Chisholm said. On the topic of Viet Nam she said that if the war does not end quickly we will be faced with domestic war in the U.S. "When I become President," the energetic woman said, "the war will end immediately.” Stricter gun control regulation is a primary concern of Ms. Chisholm, the only female presidential candidate. “People are being killed left and right because of the freedom with which people can buy guns." Ms. Chisholm also attacked the U.S. economy. She said that U.S. r.ust reassess its overseas investment program, “the U.S. must stop propping up dictatorship with our investments and aid programs. The U.S. should not support governments that do not espouse freedom. The U.S. must bring the money home.” Students Polled Evaluate Hurricane By ERIC BALOFF And DEBBIE SAMUELSON Of Tha Hurrican* Staff This week’s poll of 100 UM students is devoted entirely to the Hurricane in hopes of determining the students’ true feelings towards the newspaper and the people who produce it. Here’s how it went: Which section of the Hurricane do you read most often? News • 28% Sports .... 17% Editorial • 12% Woman’s .... 8% Entertainment ... • 1»% Classified . . . .... 16% It would seem that most UM students are news minded with the second largest amount of readers being interested in what Coral Gables has to offer in the way of fun. How would you rate the Hurricane? Informative.... «,..........................“*€% Interesting................................24% Enjoyable.................................16% Humorous..................................0% Inadequate................................10% Not Read..................................4% It is humorous to note that none of the students polled find their Hurricane humorous. Do you most often read the Tuesday or Friday issue, both equally or neither? Tuesday.................................. 9% Friday ....................................... 17% Both'................................... 70% Neither ....................................... 4% One coed who said she read the paper both days remarked how helpful it was in paper training her (dog. , in, we can no longer be the passive recipients of professional politicians.” When asked if she would support Senator Hubert Humphrey or Senator Edmund Muskie if they we'-» to receive the Democratic presidential nomination, she replied, "It would depend upon their vice-presidential running mates. If the vice-president is viable 1 might support Muskie or Humphrey; the balance of the ticket is important.” Ms. Chisholm was asked whether she thought radicals have a place in American society and replied, "There is a place in society for all shades of opinion and all kinds of people.” Speaking on the Kent State tragedy, Ms. Chisholm Today's 'Cane ’Cane Sports Editor commits the perfect crime, see p. 9. For a review of Kubrick’s new film, A Clockwork Orange, see o. 7. « Berger .........10 • Sunshine.......4 • Goldstein ......9 • Horowitz.......4 « Hurricane Eye.. 2 • Manassa ........4 • Record Review 7 « Swimming .... A
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, January 07, 1972 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1972-01-07 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (10 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_19720107 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19720107 |
Digital ID | MHC_19720107_001 |
Full Text |
Exclusive
Read about the Dade County political machine, see p. 5
Voi. 47, No. 24
Friday, January 7, 1972
Hauser To Speak To Grads
(UMNB) — Rita E. Hauser, United States Representative to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and member of the U.S. delegation to the 24th United Nations General Assembly, will be the UM’s commencement speaker Wednesday, January 26.
A noted attorney, Mrs. Hauser will give the address at ceremonies for approximately 950 degree candidates beginning at 10:30 a.m. at Dade County Auditorium. Her topic is “From Here to The Next Millenium.”
UM President Henry King Stanford will confer the degrees, ranging from the baccalaureate through the doctorate.
The President’s Commencement Reception for the degree candidates, their families and friends will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, January 25, at the Lowe Art Museum, main campus. The annual Trustees Luncheon will be held at the Whitten Memorial Student Union following commencement ceremonies.
Mrs. Hauser received her A. B. degree, with highest honors, from Hunter College in 1954. She received a Doctorate in Political Economy, with highest honors, from the University of Strasbourg, France, in 1955; her LL.B. degree following study at Harvard and New York University Law Schools, in 1958; and her License en droit (French LL.B.), with highest honors. University of Paris Law Faculty, also in 1958.
She served as Attorney, Appellate Section, Tax Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, 1959-60; is a partner in the firm of Moldover Hauser Strauss & Volin, New York City, and has been in general practice of law since 1960, specializing in private international and foreign law matters.
She is author of numerous publications and serves on committees of various bar associations. She is married to Gustave M. Hauser, vice president, General Telephone & Electronics International, Inc. They have two children.
UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI
14-44AU7 * 1972
Editorials
Rocky Walters dis-:usses UM personalities, iee p. 5.
Senate
Reallocation
Hita Hauser
. .. ml |
Archive | MHC_19720107_001.tif |
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