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B, aO!N \M>MtYCR And A\DRt A SC HiXTfcKMAN Hurnci'* H*ptrf#r* Homeward-bound'’ Np-d a rid- j ■! v. ant to share the Co-!'. ;hanother wayfarer? (»nte again a free Trucking Service is offered by UM’s 0;»-n Door (o all UM students In need of rides or passengers tor their trip home. A >• ' arte, train and bus accommodations are avail-1 " >t idents willing to pay a few- extra bucks The Air-I ■ ’’ 1 if in the Ashe Huilding tan help with flight ar- c-^ ” rr- while local bus and tram companies can be | at - I by telephone. I it th- :>jst two and a half years Oper. Door has been si ul its efforts to arrange transportation for stu-de.- - ho v >h to reduce the cost and t >neliness of travelings n I Oppn Hour acts as the go-between, coordinating rides for students on the basis of hometowns and dates of departure I hey keep a listing of the names and telephone numbers of all students requesting a transportation arrangement as .i-oipster there was a large increase in the rest' ' of students interested in oy service," said Diane i a in, gra^puteassistgnt 9/ Open Door Mails were unaware of this opportunity until the last rri intent It students let us know now. it will give us time in adv re * t > look up ndt1' and give them ihe tiatnes ot pro»-p ■'itjits,"she said. Open Door is located in huilding 49K, next door Eaton Hill Hours are from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. daily. to I rained peer counselors are available to cater to atu-,, See page J, cal, \ - Jj UFW seeks urban or By VALtRIE STRAUSS hews Cdtf#r The tale Martin I cither King Jr. ti.vf said about his nonviolent struggle to obtain equal opp »rtunit\ fur blacks. "We are not boycotting to pul anyone out of business. We a'e boycotting to pul justice in business." Angeles where 0 /err- » > liqüof tores won’t carry Gallo Wine iti support of our boycot t." t I said the pay it nl t. expenses, frot J mey. T his may But iv 1 rilinu u ttv ^ Richard room, board, spending money, work is as rewarding as any. ch like Lisi d'si a week .and sound like a big deai„JI>ut the Today, the United Farm Workers (UFW; are using the same non-violent tactics to achieve the same goals, and they are asking for help. I nlay in the Breezeway. UFW representatives will he looking tot ‘full time urban organizers” to work in Miami, Tampa or Jacksonville on the boycott of non-Ui U lettuce, table grapes and all Gallo wines. IT V\ -presentati.c Mark Richard said workers aresore-Iv needed in f lorida. "We want florida cities to become as effective as I .os 'I he l (FW boycott has been designed to bring public pressure upon the growers. Richard said. "The farm workers are asking consumers to boycott grapes and lettuce and Gallo wTne until those California growers allow workers to have elections to choose their col-l--c live bargaining agent The primary goal of the boycott is to convince the growers to sit down and talk with their workers in order to draw upa mutually-satisfactory contract. See page 2, col. 3 PR bureau cut from budget By JIM HOLLANDER Edit«/ The bite of current fiscal shortcomings has clamped down on another university service. The victim 'hi-, time i> the five man bureju of Public Relations According to Art Carlson, the bureau's assistant director, the public relations service has been canceled due to budgetary' cutbacks. The bureau's termination is effective on May 31. “Increasing fixed costs are forcing the University to vut its budget for the next fiscal year by $! 7 million below the current year's operating budget of $*>2 million." President Henry King Stanford said. Carlson said the Office of Development, under whose auspices the Public Relations Bureau presently exists, has been notified to cut its budget back by $55,000. "We’re the only office in Development that does no direct fund raising.” Carlson said in explaining why the bureau was signaled out to lake the entire burden of the Development Office’s budge- tary cut. The bureau has worked closely with the university News Bureau, acting as a lia-son between the university and all local electronic media and producing multi-media presentations withm the school Th? bureau is presently See page 6., col. & First summer session begins May 13 By LESLIE T ANNFNB U'M Of Th#Horn:*n# Sljfri UM will be in full operation this summer, with classes for the first of three summer session-, scheduled to begin on May 13. A second summer session will begin on June 24. and the post summer session, a shorter term of primarily education courses, will begin on August 2. Associate Director of UM Summer Sessions, J. tjlvin Leonard, said he expects attendance to be greater than last summer. Leonard said "the significant increase" is probably due t . the fact that students were expecting a hard time finding jobs this summer. Also, he said, many students were being encouraged by their parents to stay on now and finish their schooling in lessthanfouryears. UM will offer more than 300 courses for credit this summer, bottj giatiu:ir? KiT* unnafjf jduate, during the day and ev ening hours. A full program of study veil! consist of six credits in earn of the first and second summer sessions, giving a total of U2 credits that may be earned through attendance at both sessions. Students with a B average or above though, may request approval to carry an additional course for each session. Many special programs and workshops wilt be made available, both on atvl off campus. The Department of Anthropology's underwater archaeology program in Roa- See page 6, col. 6 Th* Miami Murricmt RICK McC AR TH V Dr. Sidney Fox Precursors of found in moon rock by UM study team By ELENA SL1.LZ O' Th* Mumcjn* Stiff Isthere lifeon other planet'/1 After a four-year study of moan rocks, a l M analysis featn has proven that the possibility is actually much greater than it was previously thought tube. "At the beginning we were verv pessimistic that we would find anything worthwhile but it turned out to be verv rnejyy ingfuk sai£ J);, Sidney ‘eg£_ head o7 the - V," j" ifiat-. ,i, r.-i; i'- t Institute for Molecular and Cellular Evolution. Moon rock sampled from two Apollo missions were found to contain precursors See page 7, col, 11 —■ | | | »......... ....... —■ ■ ■■ — >
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, April 15, 1975 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1975-04-15 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
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_19750415 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19750415 |
Digital ID | MHC_19750415_001 |
Full Text | B, aO!N \M>MtYCR And A\DRt A SC HiXTfcKMAN Hurnci'* H*ptrf#r* Homeward-bound'’ Np-d a rid- j ■! v. ant to share the Co-!'. ;hanother wayfarer? (»nte again a free Trucking Service is offered by UM’s 0;»-n Door (o all UM students In need of rides or passengers tor their trip home. A >• ' arte, train and bus accommodations are avail-1 " >t idents willing to pay a few- extra bucks The Air-I ■ ’’ 1 if in the Ashe Huilding tan help with flight ar- c-^ ” rr- while local bus and tram companies can be | at - I by telephone. I it th- :>jst two and a half years Oper. Door has been si ul its efforts to arrange transportation for stu-de.- - ho v >h to reduce the cost and t >neliness of travelings n I Oppn Hour acts as the go-between, coordinating rides for students on the basis of hometowns and dates of departure I hey keep a listing of the names and telephone numbers of all students requesting a transportation arrangement as .i-oipster there was a large increase in the rest' ' of students interested in oy service," said Diane i a in, gra^puteassistgnt 9/ Open Door Mails were unaware of this opportunity until the last rri intent It students let us know now. it will give us time in adv re * t > look up ndt1' and give them ihe tiatnes ot pro»-p ■'itjits,"she said. Open Door is located in huilding 49K, next door Eaton Hill Hours are from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. daily. to I rained peer counselors are available to cater to atu-,, See page J, cal, \ - Jj UFW seeks urban or By VALtRIE STRAUSS hews Cdtf#r The tale Martin I cither King Jr. ti.vf said about his nonviolent struggle to obtain equal opp »rtunit\ fur blacks. "We are not boycotting to pul anyone out of business. We a'e boycotting to pul justice in business." Angeles where 0 /err- » > liqüof tores won’t carry Gallo Wine iti support of our boycot t." t I said the pay it nl t. expenses, frot J mey. T his may But iv 1 rilinu u ttv ^ Richard room, board, spending money, work is as rewarding as any. ch like Lisi d'si a week .and sound like a big deai„JI>ut the Today, the United Farm Workers (UFW; are using the same non-violent tactics to achieve the same goals, and they are asking for help. I nlay in the Breezeway. UFW representatives will he looking tot ‘full time urban organizers” to work in Miami, Tampa or Jacksonville on the boycott of non-Ui U lettuce, table grapes and all Gallo wines. IT V\ -presentati.c Mark Richard said workers aresore-Iv needed in f lorida. "We want florida cities to become as effective as I .os 'I he l (FW boycott has been designed to bring public pressure upon the growers. Richard said. "The farm workers are asking consumers to boycott grapes and lettuce and Gallo wTne until those California growers allow workers to have elections to choose their col-l--c live bargaining agent The primary goal of the boycott is to convince the growers to sit down and talk with their workers in order to draw upa mutually-satisfactory contract. See page 2, col. 3 PR bureau cut from budget By JIM HOLLANDER Edit«/ The bite of current fiscal shortcomings has clamped down on another university service. The victim 'hi-, time i> the five man bureju of Public Relations According to Art Carlson, the bureau's assistant director, the public relations service has been canceled due to budgetary' cutbacks. The bureau's termination is effective on May 31. “Increasing fixed costs are forcing the University to vut its budget for the next fiscal year by $! 7 million below the current year's operating budget of $*>2 million." President Henry King Stanford said. Carlson said the Office of Development, under whose auspices the Public Relations Bureau presently exists, has been notified to cut its budget back by $55,000. "We’re the only office in Development that does no direct fund raising.” Carlson said in explaining why the bureau was signaled out to lake the entire burden of the Development Office’s budge- tary cut. The bureau has worked closely with the university News Bureau, acting as a lia-son between the university and all local electronic media and producing multi-media presentations withm the school Th? bureau is presently See page 6., col. & First summer session begins May 13 By LESLIE T ANNFNB U'M Of Th#Horn:*n# Sljfri UM will be in full operation this summer, with classes for the first of three summer session-, scheduled to begin on May 13. A second summer session will begin on June 24. and the post summer session, a shorter term of primarily education courses, will begin on August 2. Associate Director of UM Summer Sessions, J. tjlvin Leonard, said he expects attendance to be greater than last summer. Leonard said "the significant increase" is probably due t . the fact that students were expecting a hard time finding jobs this summer. Also, he said, many students were being encouraged by their parents to stay on now and finish their schooling in lessthanfouryears. UM will offer more than 300 courses for credit this summer, bottj giatiu:ir? KiT* unnafjf jduate, during the day and ev ening hours. A full program of study veil! consist of six credits in earn of the first and second summer sessions, giving a total of U2 credits that may be earned through attendance at both sessions. Students with a B average or above though, may request approval to carry an additional course for each session. Many special programs and workshops wilt be made available, both on atvl off campus. The Department of Anthropology's underwater archaeology program in Roa- See page 6, col. 6 Th* Miami Murricmt RICK McC AR TH V Dr. Sidney Fox Precursors of found in moon rock by UM study team By ELENA SL1.LZ O' Th* Mumcjn* Stiff Isthere lifeon other planet'/1 After a four-year study of moan rocks, a l M analysis featn has proven that the possibility is actually much greater than it was previously thought tube. "At the beginning we were verv pessimistic that we would find anything worthwhile but it turned out to be verv rnejyy ingfuk sai£ J);, Sidney ‘eg£_ head o7 the - V," j" ifiat-. ,i, r.-i; i'- t Institute for Molecular and Cellular Evolution. Moon rock sampled from two Apollo missions were found to contain precursors See page 7, col, 11 —■ | | | »......... ....... —■ ■ ■■ — > |
Archive | MHC_19750415_001.tif |
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