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Drug Bust Results In 7 Arrests By DIANE RENNICK Assistant Nsws l«itsr Negotiations in a University of Miami dormitory for a large marijuana deal led to the arrest of four UM students and three other persons, Metro police said. A police undercover agent took part in the negotiations which resulted in purchase of marijuana at a residence in the southwest section of Miami occupied by two of the students, investigators said. A Metro police spokesman said the undercover agent had been involved in negotiations with persons living in the Kendall area for the purchase of narcotics and was taken to UM dorms, where the negotiations were continued Thursday for the alleged purchase of a quanitity of marijuana for $3,500. For a midnight connection the agent was taken to a residence at 7340 SW 35th St. Members of the vice and intelligence squad followed. Arrests were made at the house and at the University dorms. Those arrested and charged were listed by the police as: Anthony Gilbert Dwyer, 21, a UM senior; conspiracy to violate Florida narcotics laws, possession and sale of marijuana, possession of narcotic implements. Richard Oseroff, 21, a UM senior; conspiracy to violate Florida narcotics laws and possession of marijuana. Steven Lochte 21, of 9120 SW 183 Terrace a UM student; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Noltenius Vilanova, 24, of 1204 Dickinson Dr., a UM student; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Lee David Zimmerman, 22, of the SW 35th St. address; possession of marijuana. Richard Lee Kamp, 21, of 9008 SW 97th Ave.; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Richard Glodowski, 21, of 9020 SW 97th Ave; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. ÖJlir Miaut arman? Vol. 49, No. 23 Tuesday, December II, 1973 Ph. 284-4401 r sports Coach Elliott Photo Essay . . . page 10 Machat Impeache January Tria1 Final (s) Time Patio is dotted with textbooks It's that time of year again. and The Photo by LARRY OREENE Cliff notes, rather than sun reflectors, and this is the final issue of this semester’s Hurricane. Happy holidays, and good luck on those finals.. By VALERIE STRAUSS News Editor The Student Senate voted yesterday to impeach Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) Treasurer Steve Machat for alleged malfeasance and nonfeasance of ofice. The Senate vote was 16-15 in favor of impeachment. The trial is set for January 28. The motion was brought before the Senate by Senator Alan Harris and the second was made by John Dunn. Harris charged in his resolution that Machat failed to post and maintain office hours as required by the USBG Constitution, that he improperly delegated authority to sign financial reports and requisitions without statutory or constitutional provisions permitting such delegation, that he has failed to attend meetings of the Student Activity Fee Allocation Committee on a regular and consistent basis and that he has failed to report to the Student Senate and the USBG President and the executive cabinet on the status of various university or USBG accounts. Machat said he feels the truth will come out in the trial. “The charges are unfounded and this will eventually come out. They are trying to combine two branches of government into one when really there is a separation between the two. "It is a shame that some- one has to make a mockery out of USBG because he wants his name to be made around campus,” Machat said. “Unfortunately, they picked the least political position, that of treasurer, to make their name. The treasurer is not the politician of USBG’ by the accountant and it is a shame that the Senators don't realize it,” he said. USBG Speaker Steve Silverman requested the Student Supreme Court make an interpretation on whether the treasurer is required to attend all meetings. The constitution states that “the treasurer will attend as a guest.” The Supreme Court interpreted this as meaning he is not required to attend the meeting. Senator Alan Harris said he received numerous physi- cal threats against him by telephone and in direct confrontation. “I am being threatened because of my work to clean up student goVernnfertt .I see no other reason to threaten me unless they have something to hide. I am being threatened by factions who are siding with Steve Machat,” Harris said. “I want to know why I was chased down the hall of the Student Union after requesting to see the requisitions related to USBG,” he said. Machat said the threats were nonexistent. “There is no reason to threaten some punk that is trying to make a name for himself. The charges of threats are absurd, unfounded and all are blatant lies,” he said. “I hope that the Senate Steve Machat ... impeached will wake up and realize there are no grounds for impeachment. In the future I hope we will be able to work as a common bond, not against each other, for after all, we are working for the benefit of the students,” he said. I \l Professors To File For Collective Bargaining Cosell Advocates V olunteer Work Community involvement through the Volun-t e e r Impact Program (VIP) has been endorsed by various celebrities. Howard Cosell, sports-caster, said volunteer work within the community is critical to a student’s education. “I think it is critical to a dimensional education,” he said. *T don’t think that anyone in this day and age considers education to be limited to the formalized classroom situation and to let it all end there.” Cosell said if a student goes out into the contemporary society to help its members he will have a rounded out education, “I think it (volunteer work) is critical to a dimensional education. I don't think that anyone in this day and age considers education to be limited to the formalized classroom situation and to let it all end there.” — Howard Cosell not just limited to scholastics. “College students of today have grown up in a most distressed and troubled time and should be sensitively aware of the realities of life,” Cosell said, “and community action can do just that.” Some Miami Dolphin football players have been involved in community work especially as their off season jobs. Don Nottingham, from Baltimore, Maryland, said he has been involved in the Maryland special Olympics, a nationwide organization for retarded children. “It has been a great thing for me working with these children,” Nottingham said. “People tend to put retarded children out of their minds,” he said, “but these people are wonderful human beings.” Nottingham said volunteer work similar to what he has done is good for students and acts as a positive energy outlet for them. Doug Crusan, from Pittsburgh, Penn., has been involved in volunteer work for six years with the YMCA. “It is especially satisfying work with children when you receive their warm responses,” Crusan said. By HERB GREENBERG CM Tht Hurricane Staff The University of Miami chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) will file to establish collective bargaining here, a campus AAUP spokesman said. The filing will take place Monday at 3 p.m., at the Wesley Foundation. Originally scheduled to file this week, the delay has been caused, campus AAUP vice president Nancy Clasbv said, liy the inability of the National AAUP office to immediately send a representative. C. L. Haslam, associate secretary of the National office, will be at UM Monday, Dr. Clasby said, bringing the official collective bargaining unit definition. The union will file to represent UM’s 600 full-time main campus faculty, including department chairmen and the law school faculty. At Monday’s meeting, which is open to AAUP members and interested faculty, a one-page collective bargaining application will be filled out, Dr. Clasby said, along with the discussion of the unit definition. She said contrary to original plans, “we can mail our petition to Tampa and bring ■ : ■■ * + * ■■■n “More than HQ per $ rent of the faculty here .< have returned the designation cards to A.4I P, which indicates they want to he represented hy A At P.” — \ancv < la-liv the (designation) cards to the Miami National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) office. More than 50 per cent of the faculty have returned the designation cards to AAUP, Dr. Clasby said, which indicates they want to be represented by AAUP (however, not binding them to vote for collective bargaining in the election.) The NLRB requires at least 30 per cent faculty response to the cards. There are 212 institutions nationwide that have established collective bargaining agents within the past five years. Twenty-nine of these are private institutions. And 156 have established bargaining contracts. Fifteen of those schools are represented by AAUP; 43 are represented by the American Federation of Teachers (AFL-CIO); 64 have chosen the National Education Pioneer 10 May Find Life On Planet Jupiter By JIM HOLLANDER Of Tin Hurricant ttlH Pioneer 10, an American space probe, descended to within 81,000 miles of Jupiter on Dec. 3. It then set out a course that will take the craft into interstellar space and according to a UM physicist, it will continue its flight until the universe collapses. One of the things Pioneer 10 may shed light on is the possibility of whether life exists on Jupiter. UM physicist, Dr. Joseph Davidson said “conditions of life may exist” on the giant planet. He explained that organic substances have been found on the moon, which is considered lifeless, and when put into water develop substances that resemble life. In “Jupiter-December Deadline,” the current show at the Space Transit Planetarium, it is said that substances common to Jupiter have, under labo- r a t o r y conditions, developed into life forms. Jupiter's volume is equal to nearly 1300 Earth’s and one turn on its axis, which on Earth is a day, takes nine hours and 55 minutes. It is faster than any other planet. Its extremely rapid rotation causes it to have an oblate shape, Dr. Davidson said. “Jupiter is extremely cold on its cloud tops. It's probably hot in the center so somewhere in between there is a bond of life supporting temperature. “It has 2.64 the gravitational force of Earth and it may have sharp boundaries, like ocean to air. And it may have methane snow storms,” he said. Weather patterns, he said, appear similar to Earth's. It has trade winds, bands of wind that blow continuously towards the equator from either side of it, and jet streams. He said that in the early stages of Earth’s development, Earth might have been much larger because hydrogen and helium were in abundance. Jupiter, which is a cold planet, has a mass so large that it is able to retain these two elements. If Jupiter were to ever heat up, he said the hydrogen and helium would boil off and the mass of the planet could be only three or four times the size of Earth. Jupiter is known for its large red spot which has been fading in and out of visibility. Clifford Anderson, author of The Solar System and The Constellations, said, “A large red spot became very conspicuous for a few years beginning in 1878 when it was first discovered. It reached dimensions of the order of 30,000 miles long and 7,000 miles wide. In 1882 it started to fade and since has varied in shading and degrees of visibility “White spots have appeared from time to time which seem to reside in -n Jupiter As Seen From Its Moon — Ganymede ... picture is artist's concrptire perception the atmosphere as - they move in both latitude and longitude.” Jupiter is known also for its twelve moons. Dr. Davidson said that one of them is' larger than the planet Mercury. The first four moons were discovered by Galileo in 1610. Pioneer 10's information will keep scientists busy for a long time but some results should be released soon. As for the craft itself, it has a plaque on which appears a nude man and woman showing a gesture of friendship (an earthly gesture of raising the right hand), and a map plotting its course from earth. Dr. Davidson said there is not much chance of an unearthly civilization using the plaque's map to come to Earth and bring ruin. “We’ve been sending out radio and television signals for years and so far nothing has happened.” Association; 14 are represented by the American Federation of Teachers-Na-tional Education Association; and 20 have independent agents. According to a special report by the Chronicle of Higher Education this represents 10 per cent of the nation's professors. However, five years ago, only nine colleges had contracts. The report said collective bargaining was established basically because: the tightness of funds for university budgets and faculty salaries, the leveling off of enrollments and the accompanying squeeze on faculty tenure, the poor job market for Ph.D.’s, the shifting of power from local campuses to state-system bureaucracies and the authoritarian policies of some college administrators. Faculties that have chosen collective bargaining, the report says, appear to be satisfied with it. It has been abandoned nowhere. But they say th# school atmosphere changes. . . administrators and faculty have treated each other as equal partners in a common task” in the past, says Robert J. Kibbee, chancellor of the City University of New York. Now, he says, "since faculty unions have not developed a vocabulary of their own there is a tendency to borrow both words and tactics from industrial unionism. Charges of refusal to bargain in good faith, union-busting, callousness, indifference to faculty needs — put together with rhetorical flourishes — fill the air. Charges and countercharges become common currency on the cafripus and, slowly but surely, real animosities begin to develop.” But Edward J. Bloustein of Rutgers says “I am not persuaded that there is any great polarization on my campus as a result of collective bargaining. It is true that there is an AAUP Newsletter that takes off after me monthly but that is part of the game " Faculties that established collective bargaining this fall were Towson State College, Md.; Wagner College, New York: Wentworth Institute, Mass.: the Southhampton Center of Long Island University; and Endicott Junior College, Mass. Collective bargaining was rejected this fall at Massachusetts, Villanova, Antioch, Albion, the University of Detroit, Randoiph-Macon College and Syracuse University. »
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, December 11, 1973 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1973-12-11 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
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_19731211 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19731211 |
Digital ID | MHC_19731211_001 |
Full Text | Drug Bust Results In 7 Arrests By DIANE RENNICK Assistant Nsws l«itsr Negotiations in a University of Miami dormitory for a large marijuana deal led to the arrest of four UM students and three other persons, Metro police said. A police undercover agent took part in the negotiations which resulted in purchase of marijuana at a residence in the southwest section of Miami occupied by two of the students, investigators said. A Metro police spokesman said the undercover agent had been involved in negotiations with persons living in the Kendall area for the purchase of narcotics and was taken to UM dorms, where the negotiations were continued Thursday for the alleged purchase of a quanitity of marijuana for $3,500. For a midnight connection the agent was taken to a residence at 7340 SW 35th St. Members of the vice and intelligence squad followed. Arrests were made at the house and at the University dorms. Those arrested and charged were listed by the police as: Anthony Gilbert Dwyer, 21, a UM senior; conspiracy to violate Florida narcotics laws, possession and sale of marijuana, possession of narcotic implements. Richard Oseroff, 21, a UM senior; conspiracy to violate Florida narcotics laws and possession of marijuana. Steven Lochte 21, of 9120 SW 183 Terrace a UM student; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Noltenius Vilanova, 24, of 1204 Dickinson Dr., a UM student; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Lee David Zimmerman, 22, of the SW 35th St. address; possession of marijuana. Richard Lee Kamp, 21, of 9008 SW 97th Ave.; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. Richard Glodowski, 21, of 9020 SW 97th Ave; possession of marijuana and conspiracy. ÖJlir Miaut arman? Vol. 49, No. 23 Tuesday, December II, 1973 Ph. 284-4401 r sports Coach Elliott Photo Essay . . . page 10 Machat Impeache January Tria1 Final (s) Time Patio is dotted with textbooks It's that time of year again. and The Photo by LARRY OREENE Cliff notes, rather than sun reflectors, and this is the final issue of this semester’s Hurricane. Happy holidays, and good luck on those finals.. By VALERIE STRAUSS News Editor The Student Senate voted yesterday to impeach Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) Treasurer Steve Machat for alleged malfeasance and nonfeasance of ofice. The Senate vote was 16-15 in favor of impeachment. The trial is set for January 28. The motion was brought before the Senate by Senator Alan Harris and the second was made by John Dunn. Harris charged in his resolution that Machat failed to post and maintain office hours as required by the USBG Constitution, that he improperly delegated authority to sign financial reports and requisitions without statutory or constitutional provisions permitting such delegation, that he has failed to attend meetings of the Student Activity Fee Allocation Committee on a regular and consistent basis and that he has failed to report to the Student Senate and the USBG President and the executive cabinet on the status of various university or USBG accounts. Machat said he feels the truth will come out in the trial. “The charges are unfounded and this will eventually come out. They are trying to combine two branches of government into one when really there is a separation between the two. "It is a shame that some- one has to make a mockery out of USBG because he wants his name to be made around campus,” Machat said. “Unfortunately, they picked the least political position, that of treasurer, to make their name. The treasurer is not the politician of USBG’ by the accountant and it is a shame that the Senators don't realize it,” he said. USBG Speaker Steve Silverman requested the Student Supreme Court make an interpretation on whether the treasurer is required to attend all meetings. The constitution states that “the treasurer will attend as a guest.” The Supreme Court interpreted this as meaning he is not required to attend the meeting. Senator Alan Harris said he received numerous physi- cal threats against him by telephone and in direct confrontation. “I am being threatened because of my work to clean up student goVernnfertt .I see no other reason to threaten me unless they have something to hide. I am being threatened by factions who are siding with Steve Machat,” Harris said. “I want to know why I was chased down the hall of the Student Union after requesting to see the requisitions related to USBG,” he said. Machat said the threats were nonexistent. “There is no reason to threaten some punk that is trying to make a name for himself. The charges of threats are absurd, unfounded and all are blatant lies,” he said. “I hope that the Senate Steve Machat ... impeached will wake up and realize there are no grounds for impeachment. In the future I hope we will be able to work as a common bond, not against each other, for after all, we are working for the benefit of the students,” he said. I \l Professors To File For Collective Bargaining Cosell Advocates V olunteer Work Community involvement through the Volun-t e e r Impact Program (VIP) has been endorsed by various celebrities. Howard Cosell, sports-caster, said volunteer work within the community is critical to a student’s education. “I think it is critical to a dimensional education,” he said. *T don’t think that anyone in this day and age considers education to be limited to the formalized classroom situation and to let it all end there.” Cosell said if a student goes out into the contemporary society to help its members he will have a rounded out education, “I think it (volunteer work) is critical to a dimensional education. I don't think that anyone in this day and age considers education to be limited to the formalized classroom situation and to let it all end there.” — Howard Cosell not just limited to scholastics. “College students of today have grown up in a most distressed and troubled time and should be sensitively aware of the realities of life,” Cosell said, “and community action can do just that.” Some Miami Dolphin football players have been involved in community work especially as their off season jobs. Don Nottingham, from Baltimore, Maryland, said he has been involved in the Maryland special Olympics, a nationwide organization for retarded children. “It has been a great thing for me working with these children,” Nottingham said. “People tend to put retarded children out of their minds,” he said, “but these people are wonderful human beings.” Nottingham said volunteer work similar to what he has done is good for students and acts as a positive energy outlet for them. Doug Crusan, from Pittsburgh, Penn., has been involved in volunteer work for six years with the YMCA. “It is especially satisfying work with children when you receive their warm responses,” Crusan said. By HERB GREENBERG CM Tht Hurricane Staff The University of Miami chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) will file to establish collective bargaining here, a campus AAUP spokesman said. The filing will take place Monday at 3 p.m., at the Wesley Foundation. Originally scheduled to file this week, the delay has been caused, campus AAUP vice president Nancy Clasbv said, liy the inability of the National AAUP office to immediately send a representative. C. L. Haslam, associate secretary of the National office, will be at UM Monday, Dr. Clasby said, bringing the official collective bargaining unit definition. The union will file to represent UM’s 600 full-time main campus faculty, including department chairmen and the law school faculty. At Monday’s meeting, which is open to AAUP members and interested faculty, a one-page collective bargaining application will be filled out, Dr. Clasby said, along with the discussion of the unit definition. She said contrary to original plans, “we can mail our petition to Tampa and bring ■ : ■■ * + * ■■■n “More than HQ per $ rent of the faculty here .< have returned the designation cards to A.4I P, which indicates they want to he represented hy A At P.” — \ancv < la-liv the (designation) cards to the Miami National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) office. More than 50 per cent of the faculty have returned the designation cards to AAUP, Dr. Clasby said, which indicates they want to be represented by AAUP (however, not binding them to vote for collective bargaining in the election.) The NLRB requires at least 30 per cent faculty response to the cards. There are 212 institutions nationwide that have established collective bargaining agents within the past five years. Twenty-nine of these are private institutions. And 156 have established bargaining contracts. Fifteen of those schools are represented by AAUP; 43 are represented by the American Federation of Teachers (AFL-CIO); 64 have chosen the National Education Pioneer 10 May Find Life On Planet Jupiter By JIM HOLLANDER Of Tin Hurricant ttlH Pioneer 10, an American space probe, descended to within 81,000 miles of Jupiter on Dec. 3. It then set out a course that will take the craft into interstellar space and according to a UM physicist, it will continue its flight until the universe collapses. One of the things Pioneer 10 may shed light on is the possibility of whether life exists on Jupiter. UM physicist, Dr. Joseph Davidson said “conditions of life may exist” on the giant planet. He explained that organic substances have been found on the moon, which is considered lifeless, and when put into water develop substances that resemble life. In “Jupiter-December Deadline,” the current show at the Space Transit Planetarium, it is said that substances common to Jupiter have, under labo- r a t o r y conditions, developed into life forms. Jupiter's volume is equal to nearly 1300 Earth’s and one turn on its axis, which on Earth is a day, takes nine hours and 55 minutes. It is faster than any other planet. Its extremely rapid rotation causes it to have an oblate shape, Dr. Davidson said. “Jupiter is extremely cold on its cloud tops. It's probably hot in the center so somewhere in between there is a bond of life supporting temperature. “It has 2.64 the gravitational force of Earth and it may have sharp boundaries, like ocean to air. And it may have methane snow storms,” he said. Weather patterns, he said, appear similar to Earth's. It has trade winds, bands of wind that blow continuously towards the equator from either side of it, and jet streams. He said that in the early stages of Earth’s development, Earth might have been much larger because hydrogen and helium were in abundance. Jupiter, which is a cold planet, has a mass so large that it is able to retain these two elements. If Jupiter were to ever heat up, he said the hydrogen and helium would boil off and the mass of the planet could be only three or four times the size of Earth. Jupiter is known for its large red spot which has been fading in and out of visibility. Clifford Anderson, author of The Solar System and The Constellations, said, “A large red spot became very conspicuous for a few years beginning in 1878 when it was first discovered. It reached dimensions of the order of 30,000 miles long and 7,000 miles wide. In 1882 it started to fade and since has varied in shading and degrees of visibility “White spots have appeared from time to time which seem to reside in -n Jupiter As Seen From Its Moon — Ganymede ... picture is artist's concrptire perception the atmosphere as - they move in both latitude and longitude.” Jupiter is known also for its twelve moons. Dr. Davidson said that one of them is' larger than the planet Mercury. The first four moons were discovered by Galileo in 1610. Pioneer 10's information will keep scientists busy for a long time but some results should be released soon. As for the craft itself, it has a plaque on which appears a nude man and woman showing a gesture of friendship (an earthly gesture of raising the right hand), and a map plotting its course from earth. Dr. Davidson said there is not much chance of an unearthly civilization using the plaque's map to come to Earth and bring ruin. “We’ve been sending out radio and television signals for years and so far nothing has happened.” Association; 14 are represented by the American Federation of Teachers-Na-tional Education Association; and 20 have independent agents. According to a special report by the Chronicle of Higher Education this represents 10 per cent of the nation's professors. However, five years ago, only nine colleges had contracts. The report said collective bargaining was established basically because: the tightness of funds for university budgets and faculty salaries, the leveling off of enrollments and the accompanying squeeze on faculty tenure, the poor job market for Ph.D.’s, the shifting of power from local campuses to state-system bureaucracies and the authoritarian policies of some college administrators. Faculties that have chosen collective bargaining, the report says, appear to be satisfied with it. It has been abandoned nowhere. But they say th# school atmosphere changes. . . administrators and faculty have treated each other as equal partners in a common task” in the past, says Robert J. Kibbee, chancellor of the City University of New York. Now, he says, "since faculty unions have not developed a vocabulary of their own there is a tendency to borrow both words and tactics from industrial unionism. Charges of refusal to bargain in good faith, union-busting, callousness, indifference to faculty needs — put together with rhetorical flourishes — fill the air. Charges and countercharges become common currency on the cafripus and, slowly but surely, real animosities begin to develop.” But Edward J. Bloustein of Rutgers says “I am not persuaded that there is any great polarization on my campus as a result of collective bargaining. It is true that there is an AAUP Newsletter that takes off after me monthly but that is part of the game " Faculties that established collective bargaining this fall were Towson State College, Md.; Wagner College, New York: Wentworth Institute, Mass.: the Southhampton Center of Long Island University; and Endicott Junior College, Mass. Collective bargaining was rejected this fall at Massachusetts, Villanova, Antioch, Albion, the University of Detroit, Randoiph-Macon College and Syracuse University. » |
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