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president ff ithout gemment page 7 The Mia Year, No. 21 urricane University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 29, 1963 :uiTl rr Streak Without End Page 20 First Direct Race Since ! Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 iviTurr ine Student Offices Decided Today Banquet, New President Top First Annual USG Week K semi-formal banquet cul-mmates activities in the uni-„«¡tv’s first annual Underrate Student Government C* at 8 p.m. tonight at the Everglades Hotel. Tickets will be sold at the door according to Don Pruess-jjjn’ USG Week chairman. The pte is $2-50 a person. Highlight of the banquet is the announcement of the USG president for 1963-64. The name of the man who succeeds Stuart Bloch as chief executive will be announced by President Henry K. Stanford. Before the dinner, Blas Herrero, Iron Arrow chief, will honor the new tappees of six university honoraries. Being recognized are the new members of Iron Arrow, Omicron New Fund Drive Hits Graduating Seniors Plans are now underway to organize a fund drive among Le graduating seniors to help in the development of the uni-;rsity’s physical facilities. To be conducted on a voluntary 3is, the campaign is headed by ike Klein, student chairman, d Ellen Wacher, student co- The drive will be directed by ’ward Coll, assistant to the dent on development. The rative council approved ¡measure to ask seniors for a pledge to be paid over a -year time span. "Donations will be on a purely voluntary basis,” explained Klein. “But we hope that this will also help to Srengthen the ties of the new alumni with the school.” Student chairmen have been minted in five undergradu-: schools. Later the university 1 be divided into major areas - the students will be contacted i a committee from his field. Arts and Sciences School chair-is Alvin Cohan with John an as co-chairman. I Business School chairman is 'ter Klein with Dick Minor as hairman. Engineering School chairman is Maurice Sholar, with Steve Tobak as co-chairman. Music School chairman is Carole Reinhart with Joseph Moyer as co-chairman. Education School chairman is Diane Stonecipher. “We hope that with our tradition of active student participation we can get all seniors participating,” said Klein. War Music At Beaumont An “all-American” music festival is being staged at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Beaumont Lecture Hall by music students. The performance, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Iota, women’s music sorority, and Phi Mu Alpha. Variations on the Civil War tune, “When Johnny Carnes Marching Home Again,” will be included. Delta Kappa, Nu Kappa Tau, Alpha Sigma Epsilon, Scabbard and Blade and Orange Key. A $1,000 check to Dr. Hayden C. Nicholson, dean of the university School of Medicine, will be presented by Pruessman. The funds, raised by the students during Spirit Week, are to go for cancer research. Forty-one of the university’s leading undergraduates who were selected for “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities” will receive commemorative scrolls. Seven Cami Gras trophies will be given out by Larry Plummer, carnival chairman. USG will award certificates to several campus organizations whose members have performed outstanding work for the university during this past year. A special USG booklet was published for the special three -day week. Photo By Charles Powers, KAM Brian Logan Ponders The Problem Of Handling Endorsees . . . election board chairman sentenced them 28 hours New Record Carni Gras Rakes In $7,600; Lambda Chi Makes The Most Cami Gras smashed all previous financial records by grossing more than $7,600 this year, according to Larry Plummer, carnival chairman. This tops the previous high set last spring by approximately 25 per cent, announced Norman Whitten, Student Union manager. Half of the money raked in by the 54 entries will be donated to the Bowman F. Ashe Scholarship Fund. The rest of the money is earmarked for each organization. Whirtlng SÄS ^ ?;0UndS Lambda Chi Alpha, social fraternity, was the top money-maker with $1,400 in receipts from 12 separate booths. A large gold cup will be presented to Lambda Chi. The cup cannot be kepit by any group, but rotates yearly. Seven other awards will be presented to the groups that raised the most money. Identity of the winning organizations will not be officially released until later today. Announcement of winners takes place at the Undergraduate Student Government banquet at 8 p.m. in the Everglades Hotel. Entries were divided into two groups: those with only one booth and those that entered more than one booth. Three trophies will be presented in each division to the top sorority, fraternity and independent organization that brought USG Honors Assembly Awards 85 Roz Friedman won a special leadership award from the members of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman academic honorary, in the annual Undergraduate Student Government honors assembly on Wednesday. A similar award was presented to Stanley Archenhold by Phi Eta Sigma, freshmen men’s academic honorary. He also belongs to Phi Delta Theta, social fraternity. Kenn Kerr, assistant dean of men, garnered the Greek Service Award. An Inter-Fraternity j Council advisor, Kerr was named the man who did most to help promote fraternities this year. In all, 85 awards were given out. in the most money. “Another trophy will be given to the organization who contributed the most service to others at the festival while maintaining a fine spirit, said Whitten. Plummer and Whitten both named several organizations whose members had come up with original booths. Elections for Undergraduate Student Government officers are from 9 am. to 4 pm. today in the Student Union lower lounge. Voting for candidates started yesterday in the first presidential and vice presidential direct election here in five years. Twenty candidates are competing in nine races. Four men are vying for the presidential spot and three are running for vice president. All other races are restricted by school. Biggest election controversy stemmed from the Hurricane’s endorsement of Art Rothenberg, Jerry Q. Greenfield, Neal Sonnett, Leslie Litt, Jack Shapiro, Keith Barish and Roz Friedman in last Friday’s edition. While 13 contestants started campaigning Sunday the seven endorsed candidates were set back 28-hours by a ruling of the election board which met in emergency sessions. “We imposed the 28-hour delay to try and re-establish a state of equality. The money and time in this campaign is limited and Hurricane publicity upset the balance we tried to create,” said Brian Logan, election board chairman. To nullify the paper’s endorsements a student committee of Stuart Bloch, USG president; Mike Klein, USG vice president; Tom Ciresa, Inter-Fraternity Council president; Nancy Kingsbury, Associated Women Students vice president; Peter Klug-man, Men’s Resident Hall Association president; Ann Lambert, Panhellenic Council president and Logan published a flier rapping the newspaper. Since this flier was printed, both a Men’s Residence Hall Association sheet and a combined issue of the “Campus Conservative” and “A Liberal Light” endorsed candidates. i&388SS8SæSS88gæ Reject!! Vending Machines No I Foreign Coin Market Foreign trade is ruining UM’s vending machine business. | Actually the trade’s fine, it’s the means of exchange that 1 wrecks the food machines at least once a day. And our vending machines just don’t take foreign coins. 1 “All it takes is one foreign ------ 1 coin and a machine breaks,” said John Galbraith, bookstore manager. “The machines also refuse fake coins.” Students keep feeding the fakes and imports into the machines that stand at key campus locations. But the students can’t—and won’t—beat the system. Every machine comes equipped with its own special private detective. This detective is a device that catches both the foreign coin and the phony American money. The machine’s alarm: it keeps the food . . . and the coin. The coin plugs up the hole and no one else can use the machine until it is fixed. “Students think they can beat the system by changing the shape of the coins,” exclaimed Galbraith. “They keep trying to use all kinds of weird slugs.” The cigarette machine is the only one not constantly being filled with fake money. But even these go out of whack at least once a week. The cookie machines rank first in popularity for getting the slugs. They die daily. “I can’t even begin to understand it. I have no concept of the psychology behind why some machines get more fake coins than others,” said Galbraith. But he predicts that the picture won’t change—yet. “Eventually though the students will learn that they cheat themselves and don’t really fool the machines,” Galbraith said. Meanwhile for frustrated students who lose money at the machines, refunds are available at the bookstore.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 29, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-03-29 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (20 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_19630329 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630329 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630329_001 |
Full Text | president ff ithout gemment page 7 The Mia Year, No. 21 urricane University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 29, 1963 :uiTl rr Streak Without End Page 20 First Direct Race Since ! Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 iviTurr ine Student Offices Decided Today Banquet, New President Top First Annual USG Week K semi-formal banquet cul-mmates activities in the uni-„«¡tv’s first annual Underrate Student Government C* at 8 p.m. tonight at the Everglades Hotel. Tickets will be sold at the door according to Don Pruess-jjjn’ USG Week chairman. The pte is $2-50 a person. Highlight of the banquet is the announcement of the USG president for 1963-64. The name of the man who succeeds Stuart Bloch as chief executive will be announced by President Henry K. Stanford. Before the dinner, Blas Herrero, Iron Arrow chief, will honor the new tappees of six university honoraries. Being recognized are the new members of Iron Arrow, Omicron New Fund Drive Hits Graduating Seniors Plans are now underway to organize a fund drive among Le graduating seniors to help in the development of the uni-;rsity’s physical facilities. To be conducted on a voluntary 3is, the campaign is headed by ike Klein, student chairman, d Ellen Wacher, student co- The drive will be directed by ’ward Coll, assistant to the dent on development. The rative council approved ¡measure to ask seniors for a pledge to be paid over a -year time span. "Donations will be on a purely voluntary basis,” explained Klein. “But we hope that this will also help to Srengthen the ties of the new alumni with the school.” Student chairmen have been minted in five undergradu-: schools. Later the university 1 be divided into major areas - the students will be contacted i a committee from his field. Arts and Sciences School chair-is Alvin Cohan with John an as co-chairman. I Business School chairman is 'ter Klein with Dick Minor as hairman. Engineering School chairman is Maurice Sholar, with Steve Tobak as co-chairman. Music School chairman is Carole Reinhart with Joseph Moyer as co-chairman. Education School chairman is Diane Stonecipher. “We hope that with our tradition of active student participation we can get all seniors participating,” said Klein. War Music At Beaumont An “all-American” music festival is being staged at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Beaumont Lecture Hall by music students. The performance, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Iota, women’s music sorority, and Phi Mu Alpha. Variations on the Civil War tune, “When Johnny Carnes Marching Home Again,” will be included. Delta Kappa, Nu Kappa Tau, Alpha Sigma Epsilon, Scabbard and Blade and Orange Key. A $1,000 check to Dr. Hayden C. Nicholson, dean of the university School of Medicine, will be presented by Pruessman. The funds, raised by the students during Spirit Week, are to go for cancer research. Forty-one of the university’s leading undergraduates who were selected for “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities” will receive commemorative scrolls. Seven Cami Gras trophies will be given out by Larry Plummer, carnival chairman. USG will award certificates to several campus organizations whose members have performed outstanding work for the university during this past year. A special USG booklet was published for the special three -day week. Photo By Charles Powers, KAM Brian Logan Ponders The Problem Of Handling Endorsees . . . election board chairman sentenced them 28 hours New Record Carni Gras Rakes In $7,600; Lambda Chi Makes The Most Cami Gras smashed all previous financial records by grossing more than $7,600 this year, according to Larry Plummer, carnival chairman. This tops the previous high set last spring by approximately 25 per cent, announced Norman Whitten, Student Union manager. Half of the money raked in by the 54 entries will be donated to the Bowman F. Ashe Scholarship Fund. The rest of the money is earmarked for each organization. Whirtlng SÄS ^ ?;0UndS Lambda Chi Alpha, social fraternity, was the top money-maker with $1,400 in receipts from 12 separate booths. A large gold cup will be presented to Lambda Chi. The cup cannot be kepit by any group, but rotates yearly. Seven other awards will be presented to the groups that raised the most money. Identity of the winning organizations will not be officially released until later today. Announcement of winners takes place at the Undergraduate Student Government banquet at 8 p.m. in the Everglades Hotel. Entries were divided into two groups: those with only one booth and those that entered more than one booth. Three trophies will be presented in each division to the top sorority, fraternity and independent organization that brought USG Honors Assembly Awards 85 Roz Friedman won a special leadership award from the members of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman academic honorary, in the annual Undergraduate Student Government honors assembly on Wednesday. A similar award was presented to Stanley Archenhold by Phi Eta Sigma, freshmen men’s academic honorary. He also belongs to Phi Delta Theta, social fraternity. Kenn Kerr, assistant dean of men, garnered the Greek Service Award. An Inter-Fraternity j Council advisor, Kerr was named the man who did most to help promote fraternities this year. In all, 85 awards were given out. in the most money. “Another trophy will be given to the organization who contributed the most service to others at the festival while maintaining a fine spirit, said Whitten. Plummer and Whitten both named several organizations whose members had come up with original booths. Elections for Undergraduate Student Government officers are from 9 am. to 4 pm. today in the Student Union lower lounge. Voting for candidates started yesterday in the first presidential and vice presidential direct election here in five years. Twenty candidates are competing in nine races. Four men are vying for the presidential spot and three are running for vice president. All other races are restricted by school. Biggest election controversy stemmed from the Hurricane’s endorsement of Art Rothenberg, Jerry Q. Greenfield, Neal Sonnett, Leslie Litt, Jack Shapiro, Keith Barish and Roz Friedman in last Friday’s edition. While 13 contestants started campaigning Sunday the seven endorsed candidates were set back 28-hours by a ruling of the election board which met in emergency sessions. “We imposed the 28-hour delay to try and re-establish a state of equality. The money and time in this campaign is limited and Hurricane publicity upset the balance we tried to create,” said Brian Logan, election board chairman. To nullify the paper’s endorsements a student committee of Stuart Bloch, USG president; Mike Klein, USG vice president; Tom Ciresa, Inter-Fraternity Council president; Nancy Kingsbury, Associated Women Students vice president; Peter Klug-man, Men’s Resident Hall Association president; Ann Lambert, Panhellenic Council president and Logan published a flier rapping the newspaper. Since this flier was printed, both a Men’s Residence Hall Association sheet and a combined issue of the “Campus Conservative” and “A Liberal Light” endorsed candidates. i&388SS8SæSS88gæ Reject!! Vending Machines No I Foreign Coin Market Foreign trade is ruining UM’s vending machine business. | Actually the trade’s fine, it’s the means of exchange that 1 wrecks the food machines at least once a day. And our vending machines just don’t take foreign coins. 1 “All it takes is one foreign ------ 1 coin and a machine breaks,” said John Galbraith, bookstore manager. “The machines also refuse fake coins.” Students keep feeding the fakes and imports into the machines that stand at key campus locations. But the students can’t—and won’t—beat the system. Every machine comes equipped with its own special private detective. This detective is a device that catches both the foreign coin and the phony American money. The machine’s alarm: it keeps the food . . . and the coin. The coin plugs up the hole and no one else can use the machine until it is fixed. “Students think they can beat the system by changing the shape of the coins,” exclaimed Galbraith. “They keep trying to use all kinds of weird slugs.” The cigarette machine is the only one not constantly being filled with fake money. But even these go out of whack at least once a week. The cookie machines rank first in popularity for getting the slugs. They die daily. “I can’t even begin to understand it. I have no concept of the psychology behind why some machines get more fake coins than others,” said Galbraith. But he predicts that the picture won’t change—yet. “Eventually though the students will learn that they cheat themselves and don’t really fool the machines,” Galbraith said. Meanwhile for frustrated students who lose money at the machines, refunds are available at the bookstore. |
Archive | mhc_19630329_001.tif |
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