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5 +;rr Orange Bowl Order— Stomp Horned Frqg^f MIAMI Name of the game will be football. but y°u miSht swear it’s f«I've Got a Secret” here tomorrow night. Towering Texas Christian and TRAculous Miami are scheduled to toe the mark at 8:15 p.m., and ,/JL curious crowd of over 50,000 I should jam the Orange Bowl to i f out what gives with both giteams. The as an game should shape up interesting aerial and running duel between T.C.U.’s Sonny Gibbs and Miami’s George Mira. Because of a “must” performance for an All-American selection, both men have to be up for the game. Gibbs, who has worlds of talent packed in that 79-inch, 230-pound frame, is expected to be the key to any success that the Frogs have in vision. Called the largest quarterback in football history, the big fellow is destined for his finest season ever. Gibbs has been one of the most “hot-cold” players in Frog grid annals. His big days have brought the Frogs glory such as the 6-0 upset of Texas last year, which knocked them out of the number-one ranking. But the inconsistency of the giant back and his teammates in other games is the reason that the last two seasons have been below par for a Martin offense. Head Coach Othol (Abe) Martin has this to say about his quarterback prospects, “I like our QBs all right . . . yes sir, I’ll take these lads ... Gibbs (Sonny) should be the best in college ball . . . Compared to 1961? Gibbs is back, and he’s a top all-American candidate . . . Mills is, too, and then there is Howard ... we should be bet- ter ... in fact, I just know well be better here.” Mira, only Q'O", is also destined for a great season. In last weeks upset victory over Pitt, the Matador reeled for 86 yards rushing and 162 yards by route of the air. Statistics speak for themselves. Both teams notched triumphs last weekend, Miami 23-14 over Pitt and T.C.U. 6-3 at Kansas. (Continued on page 20) SEP 28 1962 HORNED FROG TCU Mascot the weather • Hotter than usual, with *, showers on the beaches. The Mia urricane Ole Miss Editors Tell Their Story Page 7 Vol. XXXVIII, No. 2 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla. September 28, 1962 m t Ryder roared id floored ring dive Panel Will Pick HC Queen By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane Copy Editor Four beauty experts and one fniversity faculty member will oose the homecoming queen JND END and her court this year. Students will not vote for the queen or princesses. Last year’s student vote was considered only a trial run. 1 The five judges’ names won’t be known until the contest which will be held in the West New ot different fra Dorm on Oct 8. ; last year, rvhe: Queen applications must be re-10-7,” said Min turned to the student activities t ease. They mail office by noon Wednesday. All pass when the; contestants must have a 1.0 over-iny men back inti ■ all average, and be taking at least . But it gave t 12 credits. room. I sorts Hopefuls will be judged on l be better pit- beauty, poise, and personality, r draw play, Organizations wanting to enter nade it go- h* floats or cars in the parade can terrific.” send representatives to sign up ■rs were boarc today in the student activities rport when Flo® office. Next Friday is the dead-m Coatta meanfc line. getting a look* There is a $5 entry fee, accord-mes for their 0? ing to Brad Hubert, parade chair -Orange Bowl. man. The parade is slated for said Coatta, sha 7:30 p.m. Thursday on Oct. 18. in admiration.'* Floats will be divided into id like a med| four classes: independents, sor-ity, fraternities with floats isting at least $200, and fraternities with floats costing less than $200. k Each organization with a float must enter a dignity convertible with a driver. No group advertising is permitted. HClubs wanting to enter the Blouse decorations contest may sign up next week in the student activities office from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. RHomecoming begins on Wednesday, Oct. 17 and ends on Saturday, Oct. 20. 's the best .owed me a si ATISTICS ng empted \pleted ng DUAL LEADERS USG May Ax Parking Fee ■ ■■ V : ■- TROPICAL RAINSTORM. Students going to class had to wade through as much as six inches of water Friday morning when a sud- Photo by Nitti den wind and rain storm lashed the campus. Trash cans were dumped and electricity was blown out, closing several classes. Proctors Can Check Dorm Rooms Without Warrants — Housing Office By MIKE MUNZELL Hurricane News Editor Passkeys to all men’s apartments and Eaton Hall rooms have been given to student proctors to make checks of all rooms at least twice weekly. Student proctors are supposed to enter rooms only if they have proof of a serious violation, or in case of emergency. Otherwise they must first get Grimm’s permission. “If they find a drunken brawl going on in one of the build- ings, of course they may use the keys,” said Grimm. It is within the legal right of any university official to enter any room on campus, according to Grimm. No search warrants are necessary. “There will be no shake-downs,” Grimm declared. “No proctor will rummage through the personal belongings, closets or drawers of a student. If this becomes necessary, I will do it personally.” Grimm also admitted that there might be some confusion if a student claims something valuable is missing when his room was searched. “I can only say that the burden of proof will be on them. The proctors are wholly trustworthy, or they would not have been given the keys,” Grimm remarked. Rooms will be checked for a double purpose: to insure that housing rules are being obeyed and also to help the student get to know his dorm advisor. Com 13 Varsisy À ers swim tean\ ^forward«8 g Lew every swimn^J tween 1 ans' A*« l, which is > îear 57th j many P°sitf$ ihman and . udents j HKS Today In Atlanta Directs Ole Miss Probe 3l w dr. STANFORD Watches Politics President Henry King Stanford flew to Atlanta today to direct an investigation of University of Mississippi educational tactics. Dr. Stanford, chairman of the executive council of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schols, ordered the 1 p.m. emergency meeting after Mississippi politicians began meddling with university policy there. “The most drastic action we could take would be to discredit the University of Mississippi,” Dr. Stanford said. Credits earned at a discredited institution are not accepted at other institutions to which the student may wish to transfer. “The meeting was called to review what seems to be the assumption of authority by the government,” he said. “Universities must not be subjected to political manipulation.” Earlier in the week, the president had said that he was watching events at Mississippi with the “gravest concern.” He pointed out that 20 years ago his association discredited 10 state colleges and universities in Georgia. At the time, the governor was interfering with educational procedure and the schools were not readmitted until newly elected Gov. Ellis Arnold —who had gained support from parents of college students—made reforms satisfactory to the association. Dr. Stanford said that any action decided upon at today’s emergency meeting will probably be held for approval by the annual convention of the S-A.S.C. meeting at Dallas Nov. 26-29. Direct Elections In Works Constitutional amendments for direct election by the student body for USG president and vice president passed their first hurdles when they received council approval Tuesday. The two amendments, first introduced and passed by USG last year but vetoed by Dr. Jay Pearson, then UM president, would make election to the two highest positions in student government directly responsible to the entire university. In the past, the 15 election members of the council have voted among themselves for the two positions. A third constitutional amendment, designed to eliminate campaign expenses by private individuals and the candidates, also passed the council with its first reading. All three amendments will now be advertised in the Hurricane and will then be put to a second vote at the council’s Oct. 10 meeting. Council approval would send them to the Board of Review and then to the President’s office for his signature. It was the council itself whidi defeated last year’s attempt to give the student body direct elections. Dr. Pearson felt that the new president should be the one to determine whether such a system was feasible on this campus. The proposal to abolish campaign expenditures has been presented as a result of a poll of 18 universities conducted over the summer by Mike Klein, USG Vice President. According to Klein, the system would be patterned after that at the University of Tennessee “where I understand they get 85 or 90 per cent of the students to vote.” Last spring’s election produced a turnout of approximately five per cent of the UM student body. By LEONARD TEEL Hurricane Editor Students this week made the first bid to take over campus parking authority. A proposal to give control of parking fines to members of a student court passed the Undergraduate Student Government Council Tuesday afternoon. The bill will become law if USG members pass it a second time Oct. 10 and then get the signature of Dr. Henry King Stanford, president. One of the first actions under the new power would be the slashing of current high fines, according to Stu Bloch, USG president. Bloch said that the court would cut first-offense fines from $5 to $1. Second-offense students would pay $3 instead of $10. Currently parking fines are given by campus police, and violators must appeal through the office of Noble Hendrix, dean of students. Under the system now, a student is liable for disciplinary action or suspension for repeated violations. With the new proposal, the student court would also have power to push reforms in the code. Bloch said that the court would examine closely the $5 parking sticker fee now charged. Earlier this week student government officials asked the University administration for a complete and detailed accounting of the more than $20,000 that was poured into the sticker fund last year. Meanwhile another such sum was being put into the fund by students who had to meet the sticker deadline Friday. The University report is being prepared by John O’Day, director (Turn To Page 15) He Might Build Wing Tank Dock Two B-47 wing fuel tanks that have been sitting on the lake shore for three months may he used to build a boat dock, according to Chink Whitten, Student Union manager. The tanks — worth $2,000 each — were carted here from Homestead Air Force Base. The University paid the cost of shipping. Plans are still indefinite, Whitten said, but he would like to rig the two hollow tanks with a platform, and set it adrift GIDEON MUTISO, premedicine student from Kenya, concludes his series with the story of how nationalism and religion clashed in the drive for independence. Page 7. GOVERNMENT PROFESSOR Dr. J. Ben Stalvey urges against invading Cuba — an answer to last week’s report by Cuban exile economist Dr. Rafael Miquel. Page 9. STUDENT UNIONS a-round the world are examined in a special report. Page 5.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, September 28, 1962 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1962-09-28 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (21 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_19620928 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19620928 |
Digital ID | mhc_19620928_001 |
Full Text | 5 +;rr Orange Bowl Order— Stomp Horned Frqg^f MIAMI Name of the game will be football. but y°u miSht swear it’s f«I've Got a Secret” here tomorrow night. Towering Texas Christian and TRAculous Miami are scheduled to toe the mark at 8:15 p.m., and ,/JL curious crowd of over 50,000 I should jam the Orange Bowl to i f out what gives with both giteams. The as an game should shape up interesting aerial and running duel between T.C.U.’s Sonny Gibbs and Miami’s George Mira. Because of a “must” performance for an All-American selection, both men have to be up for the game. Gibbs, who has worlds of talent packed in that 79-inch, 230-pound frame, is expected to be the key to any success that the Frogs have in vision. Called the largest quarterback in football history, the big fellow is destined for his finest season ever. Gibbs has been one of the most “hot-cold” players in Frog grid annals. His big days have brought the Frogs glory such as the 6-0 upset of Texas last year, which knocked them out of the number-one ranking. But the inconsistency of the giant back and his teammates in other games is the reason that the last two seasons have been below par for a Martin offense. Head Coach Othol (Abe) Martin has this to say about his quarterback prospects, “I like our QBs all right . . . yes sir, I’ll take these lads ... Gibbs (Sonny) should be the best in college ball . . . Compared to 1961? Gibbs is back, and he’s a top all-American candidate . . . Mills is, too, and then there is Howard ... we should be bet- ter ... in fact, I just know well be better here.” Mira, only Q'O", is also destined for a great season. In last weeks upset victory over Pitt, the Matador reeled for 86 yards rushing and 162 yards by route of the air. Statistics speak for themselves. Both teams notched triumphs last weekend, Miami 23-14 over Pitt and T.C.U. 6-3 at Kansas. (Continued on page 20) SEP 28 1962 HORNED FROG TCU Mascot the weather • Hotter than usual, with *, showers on the beaches. The Mia urricane Ole Miss Editors Tell Their Story Page 7 Vol. XXXVIII, No. 2 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla. September 28, 1962 m t Ryder roared id floored ring dive Panel Will Pick HC Queen By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane Copy Editor Four beauty experts and one fniversity faculty member will oose the homecoming queen JND END and her court this year. Students will not vote for the queen or princesses. Last year’s student vote was considered only a trial run. 1 The five judges’ names won’t be known until the contest which will be held in the West New ot different fra Dorm on Oct 8. ; last year, rvhe: Queen applications must be re-10-7,” said Min turned to the student activities t ease. They mail office by noon Wednesday. All pass when the; contestants must have a 1.0 over-iny men back inti ■ all average, and be taking at least . But it gave t 12 credits. room. I sorts Hopefuls will be judged on l be better pit- beauty, poise, and personality, r draw play, Organizations wanting to enter nade it go- h* floats or cars in the parade can terrific.” send representatives to sign up ■rs were boarc today in the student activities rport when Flo® office. Next Friday is the dead-m Coatta meanfc line. getting a look* There is a $5 entry fee, accord-mes for their 0? ing to Brad Hubert, parade chair -Orange Bowl. man. The parade is slated for said Coatta, sha 7:30 p.m. Thursday on Oct. 18. in admiration.'* Floats will be divided into id like a med| four classes: independents, sor-ity, fraternities with floats isting at least $200, and fraternities with floats costing less than $200. k Each organization with a float must enter a dignity convertible with a driver. No group advertising is permitted. HClubs wanting to enter the Blouse decorations contest may sign up next week in the student activities office from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. RHomecoming begins on Wednesday, Oct. 17 and ends on Saturday, Oct. 20. 's the best .owed me a si ATISTICS ng empted \pleted ng DUAL LEADERS USG May Ax Parking Fee ■ ■■ V : ■- TROPICAL RAINSTORM. Students going to class had to wade through as much as six inches of water Friday morning when a sud- Photo by Nitti den wind and rain storm lashed the campus. Trash cans were dumped and electricity was blown out, closing several classes. Proctors Can Check Dorm Rooms Without Warrants — Housing Office By MIKE MUNZELL Hurricane News Editor Passkeys to all men’s apartments and Eaton Hall rooms have been given to student proctors to make checks of all rooms at least twice weekly. Student proctors are supposed to enter rooms only if they have proof of a serious violation, or in case of emergency. Otherwise they must first get Grimm’s permission. “If they find a drunken brawl going on in one of the build- ings, of course they may use the keys,” said Grimm. It is within the legal right of any university official to enter any room on campus, according to Grimm. No search warrants are necessary. “There will be no shake-downs,” Grimm declared. “No proctor will rummage through the personal belongings, closets or drawers of a student. If this becomes necessary, I will do it personally.” Grimm also admitted that there might be some confusion if a student claims something valuable is missing when his room was searched. “I can only say that the burden of proof will be on them. The proctors are wholly trustworthy, or they would not have been given the keys,” Grimm remarked. Rooms will be checked for a double purpose: to insure that housing rules are being obeyed and also to help the student get to know his dorm advisor. Com 13 Varsisy À ers swim tean\ ^forward«8 g Lew every swimn^J tween 1 ans' A*« l, which is > îear 57th j many P°sitf$ ihman and . udents j HKS Today In Atlanta Directs Ole Miss Probe 3l w dr. STANFORD Watches Politics President Henry King Stanford flew to Atlanta today to direct an investigation of University of Mississippi educational tactics. Dr. Stanford, chairman of the executive council of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schols, ordered the 1 p.m. emergency meeting after Mississippi politicians began meddling with university policy there. “The most drastic action we could take would be to discredit the University of Mississippi,” Dr. Stanford said. Credits earned at a discredited institution are not accepted at other institutions to which the student may wish to transfer. “The meeting was called to review what seems to be the assumption of authority by the government,” he said. “Universities must not be subjected to political manipulation.” Earlier in the week, the president had said that he was watching events at Mississippi with the “gravest concern.” He pointed out that 20 years ago his association discredited 10 state colleges and universities in Georgia. At the time, the governor was interfering with educational procedure and the schools were not readmitted until newly elected Gov. Ellis Arnold —who had gained support from parents of college students—made reforms satisfactory to the association. Dr. Stanford said that any action decided upon at today’s emergency meeting will probably be held for approval by the annual convention of the S-A.S.C. meeting at Dallas Nov. 26-29. Direct Elections In Works Constitutional amendments for direct election by the student body for USG president and vice president passed their first hurdles when they received council approval Tuesday. The two amendments, first introduced and passed by USG last year but vetoed by Dr. Jay Pearson, then UM president, would make election to the two highest positions in student government directly responsible to the entire university. In the past, the 15 election members of the council have voted among themselves for the two positions. A third constitutional amendment, designed to eliminate campaign expenses by private individuals and the candidates, also passed the council with its first reading. All three amendments will now be advertised in the Hurricane and will then be put to a second vote at the council’s Oct. 10 meeting. Council approval would send them to the Board of Review and then to the President’s office for his signature. It was the council itself whidi defeated last year’s attempt to give the student body direct elections. Dr. Pearson felt that the new president should be the one to determine whether such a system was feasible on this campus. The proposal to abolish campaign expenditures has been presented as a result of a poll of 18 universities conducted over the summer by Mike Klein, USG Vice President. According to Klein, the system would be patterned after that at the University of Tennessee “where I understand they get 85 or 90 per cent of the students to vote.” Last spring’s election produced a turnout of approximately five per cent of the UM student body. By LEONARD TEEL Hurricane Editor Students this week made the first bid to take over campus parking authority. A proposal to give control of parking fines to members of a student court passed the Undergraduate Student Government Council Tuesday afternoon. The bill will become law if USG members pass it a second time Oct. 10 and then get the signature of Dr. Henry King Stanford, president. One of the first actions under the new power would be the slashing of current high fines, according to Stu Bloch, USG president. Bloch said that the court would cut first-offense fines from $5 to $1. Second-offense students would pay $3 instead of $10. Currently parking fines are given by campus police, and violators must appeal through the office of Noble Hendrix, dean of students. Under the system now, a student is liable for disciplinary action or suspension for repeated violations. With the new proposal, the student court would also have power to push reforms in the code. Bloch said that the court would examine closely the $5 parking sticker fee now charged. Earlier this week student government officials asked the University administration for a complete and detailed accounting of the more than $20,000 that was poured into the sticker fund last year. Meanwhile another such sum was being put into the fund by students who had to meet the sticker deadline Friday. The University report is being prepared by John O’Day, director (Turn To Page 15) He Might Build Wing Tank Dock Two B-47 wing fuel tanks that have been sitting on the lake shore for three months may he used to build a boat dock, according to Chink Whitten, Student Union manager. The tanks — worth $2,000 each — were carted here from Homestead Air Force Base. The University paid the cost of shipping. Plans are still indefinite, Whitten said, but he would like to rig the two hollow tanks with a platform, and set it adrift GIDEON MUTISO, premedicine student from Kenya, concludes his series with the story of how nationalism and religion clashed in the drive for independence. Page 7. GOVERNMENT PROFESSOR Dr. J. Ben Stalvey urges against invading Cuba — an answer to last week’s report by Cuban exile economist Dr. Rafael Miquel. Page 9. STUDENT UNIONS a-round the world are examined in a special report. Page 5. |
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