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Wade model encourages sfudt 1/, first priority Is to identi the students and give' tl pose that will encourage artistic capabilities, them to feel my poses paper.’- yvmniTY OF MIAMI tlated as a member ciety fc '(ributtai if the Artistin-la fur. the real- By CINDY KATZ HurrksiM a*n*rtor UM coed Genessa Goldsmith Is a part-time professional nude model. “I became a nude model,” she said, “because as an art student, I feel most female nude models do not know how to convey to the artist the necessary feelings that are petti-nent to a productive artist-model relationship. “I have studied figure drawing in three schools. Most of the nude models I’ve had to draw walk into the art classes, and proceed to plop themselves in a chair and say ‘this is my pose for the next two hours.’ "As a student I didn't want to draw them because I was uninspired to, because of the lack of emotion being transmitted by the model or the pose. I just felt they didn't care. “When I am modeling, my Goldsmith has diversified interests. She was this year’s designer of the Mahoney-Pearson Homecoming float and Queen costumes. In the Fall of ’74 she was ini- When not attending UM she resides In Philadelphia, where she graduated with honors from a Quaker school which she attended for nine years. “My Quaker oriented education did not Infringe upon my See page 2, col. 4 --------------1-1 .........-J Development program nets $100 million By JIM HOLLANDER SUItor UM’s Golden Anniversary Development Program (GADP) has raised $100.6 million since its inception II years ago. Dr. Henry King Stanford told nearly 900 members of the UM So- ciety of University Founders Saturday night. Dr. Stanford also told the group that a new fund raising campaign, “Commitment-25,” has been inaugurated by the Board of Trustees to secure $23 million within the next five years. vsvsr js ■ z - Peace Corps: be a volunteer Youthful globe-trotting aspirants can skirt the financial problems of traveling and at the same time use their academic and personal experience to help underprivileged nations train badly needed manpower. Students looking for the opportunity to combine work and adventure will have the chance to query Peace Corps volunteers today and Wednesday in the breezeway. V. In his report to the Founders on the success of the GADP, Stanford noted that $8X8 million of the $100.6 million came from the private sector of the community, including 17 gifts In excess of $1 million. The remaining $16.8 million came as federal grants. When the Founders launched their fund raising drive In 1964, their goal was $93.4 million. The drive climaxes UM’s 50th anniversary of its charter date, April 8,1925. “Wu hat* hd Inienilori of surrendering io Inflation.”" Stanford told the Founders during dinner at the Fontaine-See page 6, col. I Boycott of Gallo wines spreading across nation By LESLIE TANNENBAUM Of Th* Hurricane Staff A student boycott of all Gallo wines called by the U.S. National Student Association (NSA), is now spreading across the nation's campuses In support of what the association calls “The farmworkers’ struggle for justice and human dignity,” universities have been successful in discontinuing the sale of Gallo wines in their campus pubs and removing Gallo products from the shelves of student supported liquor stores. , Gallo wines include Boone’s l-arm, Madria Mad-ria, Hippie, Spanada. Thun-derbird, Andre, Carlo Rossi and any wine made in Modesto, California. The boycott stems from a dispute between the United Farm Workers (UFW) and the E. & J Gallo Winery. today's k V' s r' k Ÿ' k r' k *There's By HERB GREENBERG Hurrican« Alumnus Margaret Ann Robinson is areal living doll. At 38-inches tall, the 50-year-old woman is making a living as the star of the Hoxie Bros. Cirrus sideshow, which was at UM last week. She is considered the smallest woman in the world. A freak? An oddity? "There’s bigger freaks out in the audience than up on the platform,” says Ann, her 68-year-old mother, who travels with her. bigger freaks in audience' Margaret Ann speaks in an almost inaudible high-pitched voice. Her mother does most of the talking. Margaret Ann. she says, was a normal baby of normal-sized parents Irom Denver, Colo. "She was always healthy. Once a neighbor said she was small for her age. So I took her to a doctor. He said, 'go home, she'll outgrow you ' " Shedidn’t, of course. She has an eighth grade education and has been in show business since vaudeville. In those days, the act would begin with her and a male midget presented on stage in a suitcase. Today she’s known as Princess Margaret Ann and sits in a pint-sized chair on a platform, along with the sword swallower, fire eater and electric lady. She’s clad in a long, black, Jewel-enlaced gown, wears miniature earrings and rings and is perfectly proportioned. A smile frequently comes to her creased face when the crowds gather: the See page 2, col. I When the UFW-Gallo contract expired in April, 1973, “the Gallo Winery consciously chose a new union, the Teamsters, in an effort to destroy the Farm Workers’ Union and arrange a contract that benefits the Winery rather than the workers,” NSA President Kathy Kelly said. Gallo refuses to hold a union election, despite the fact that 173 out of 222 workers have signed statements that they would rather be represented by the UFW, Kelly said. She also said sworn affidavits from workers asserted See page 6, col. I
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 25, 1975 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1975-03-25 |
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_19750325 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19750325 |
Digital ID | MHC_19750325_001 |
Full Text | Wade model encourages sfudt 1/, first priority Is to identi the students and give' tl pose that will encourage artistic capabilities, them to feel my poses paper.’- yvmniTY OF MIAMI tlated as a member ciety fc '(ributtai if the Artistin-la fur. the real- By CINDY KATZ HurrksiM a*n*rtor UM coed Genessa Goldsmith Is a part-time professional nude model. “I became a nude model,” she said, “because as an art student, I feel most female nude models do not know how to convey to the artist the necessary feelings that are petti-nent to a productive artist-model relationship. “I have studied figure drawing in three schools. Most of the nude models I’ve had to draw walk into the art classes, and proceed to plop themselves in a chair and say ‘this is my pose for the next two hours.’ "As a student I didn't want to draw them because I was uninspired to, because of the lack of emotion being transmitted by the model or the pose. I just felt they didn't care. “When I am modeling, my Goldsmith has diversified interests. She was this year’s designer of the Mahoney-Pearson Homecoming float and Queen costumes. In the Fall of ’74 she was ini- When not attending UM she resides In Philadelphia, where she graduated with honors from a Quaker school which she attended for nine years. “My Quaker oriented education did not Infringe upon my See page 2, col. 4 --------------1-1 .........-J Development program nets $100 million By JIM HOLLANDER SUItor UM’s Golden Anniversary Development Program (GADP) has raised $100.6 million since its inception II years ago. Dr. Henry King Stanford told nearly 900 members of the UM So- ciety of University Founders Saturday night. Dr. Stanford also told the group that a new fund raising campaign, “Commitment-25,” has been inaugurated by the Board of Trustees to secure $23 million within the next five years. vsvsr js ■ z - Peace Corps: be a volunteer Youthful globe-trotting aspirants can skirt the financial problems of traveling and at the same time use their academic and personal experience to help underprivileged nations train badly needed manpower. Students looking for the opportunity to combine work and adventure will have the chance to query Peace Corps volunteers today and Wednesday in the breezeway. V. In his report to the Founders on the success of the GADP, Stanford noted that $8X8 million of the $100.6 million came from the private sector of the community, including 17 gifts In excess of $1 million. The remaining $16.8 million came as federal grants. When the Founders launched their fund raising drive In 1964, their goal was $93.4 million. The drive climaxes UM’s 50th anniversary of its charter date, April 8,1925. “Wu hat* hd Inienilori of surrendering io Inflation.”" Stanford told the Founders during dinner at the Fontaine-See page 6, col. I Boycott of Gallo wines spreading across nation By LESLIE TANNENBAUM Of Th* Hurricane Staff A student boycott of all Gallo wines called by the U.S. National Student Association (NSA), is now spreading across the nation's campuses In support of what the association calls “The farmworkers’ struggle for justice and human dignity,” universities have been successful in discontinuing the sale of Gallo wines in their campus pubs and removing Gallo products from the shelves of student supported liquor stores. , Gallo wines include Boone’s l-arm, Madria Mad-ria, Hippie, Spanada. Thun-derbird, Andre, Carlo Rossi and any wine made in Modesto, California. The boycott stems from a dispute between the United Farm Workers (UFW) and the E. & J Gallo Winery. today's k V' s r' k Ÿ' k r' k *There's By HERB GREENBERG Hurrican« Alumnus Margaret Ann Robinson is areal living doll. At 38-inches tall, the 50-year-old woman is making a living as the star of the Hoxie Bros. Cirrus sideshow, which was at UM last week. She is considered the smallest woman in the world. A freak? An oddity? "There’s bigger freaks out in the audience than up on the platform,” says Ann, her 68-year-old mother, who travels with her. bigger freaks in audience' Margaret Ann speaks in an almost inaudible high-pitched voice. Her mother does most of the talking. Margaret Ann. she says, was a normal baby of normal-sized parents Irom Denver, Colo. "She was always healthy. Once a neighbor said she was small for her age. So I took her to a doctor. He said, 'go home, she'll outgrow you ' " Shedidn’t, of course. She has an eighth grade education and has been in show business since vaudeville. In those days, the act would begin with her and a male midget presented on stage in a suitcase. Today she’s known as Princess Margaret Ann and sits in a pint-sized chair on a platform, along with the sword swallower, fire eater and electric lady. She’s clad in a long, black, Jewel-enlaced gown, wears miniature earrings and rings and is perfectly proportioned. A smile frequently comes to her creased face when the crowds gather: the See page 2, col. I When the UFW-Gallo contract expired in April, 1973, “the Gallo Winery consciously chose a new union, the Teamsters, in an effort to destroy the Farm Workers’ Union and arrange a contract that benefits the Winery rather than the workers,” NSA President Kathy Kelly said. Gallo refuses to hold a union election, despite the fact that 173 out of 222 workers have signed statements that they would rather be represented by the UFW, Kelly said. She also said sworn affidavits from workers asserted See page 6, col. I |
Archive | MHC_19750325_001.tif |
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