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idy Gustafson >ach *til ’64 Qus Appointed Athletic Director Head football coach Andy “JLfson on Monday officially GUt over the job of athletic '““Lor. succeeding Jack Har-who died last month of cancer- rustafson will carry on as football coach through the 1963 season- “1 have confidence that Coach Gustafson will carry on in the -eat tradition that Mr. Haring brought to the office of athletic director,” said Presi-dent Henry K. Stanford, in announcing the appointment._______ of Harding since they played in the same backfield for the University of Pittsburgh, expressed a strong desire to run the athletic program with many of the ideas expressed by his predecessor. “It was always Mr. Harding’s plan to schedule the toughest competition he could find,” said Gustafson, ‘‘and I plan to carry that through to the letter. As for a conference,” he said’ “! think we do a lot bet- ter as an independent, drawing upon national schools for the teams we play.” Head coach since he took over from Harding in 1948, Gustafson has been credited with developing Miami into the football power it is today. “People ask me if it’s going to be hard, keeping my hand out of coaching when I’ve coached for 35 years,” said Gustafson. “Sure, it’ll be tough,” he answered himself. “But Mr. Har- Press Unfair See Page 7 The Mia 38th Year, No. 19 Lniversity of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 15, 1963 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 ding never interfered with my job when he was athletic director, and I guess that’s the way it’s got to be.” According to Dr. Stanford, no plans have been made for a successor to the head coaching spot. “We’ve had no prospects contact us,” he said, “and we’re not looking for anyone at this time.” Concerning assistant coach Walter Kichefski moving up to be head coach: “I have great regard for Coach Kichefski,” said Dr. Stanford, “but it’s really too early to tell.” According to the president, the task of finding a new head coach will begin before the end of spring, but the announcement of appointment will not come until December. “Coach Gustafson will coach until Jan. 1,-1964,” said Dr. Stanford. Then, catchini Jan. 2, should bid.” urne iimself, or a :Jfc I'h ¿»BfiAffir Lovers ¿Beware ee Page 5 Deferred Rush Plan To Remain By MIKE M IN ZELL Hurricane Staff Writer Inter-Fraternity Council’s plan to abolish deferred rush was refused Monday by President Henry K. Stanford. In a letter to IFC President Tom Ciresa, Stanford said deferred h would be retained. The decision was prompted by a unanimous recommendation of fraternity alumni advisors to continue the present system. At an IFC meeting Wednesday, Ciresa called for immediate ac-‘n from each fraternity. “Now that we have the final 'ision, let’s get out and work to vive the fraternity program,” e said. “We can give the system [a shot in the arm if we bring in ore pledges and sell the frater-ty system as a whole.” Mr Kenn Kerr, assistant dean men, reported that his office working on a program that ght allow some incoming fresh-en to pledge fraternities. Ihe system would be based on high school class rank, placement test scores, and first semester mid-term grades. (Continued on Page 4) Photo by Don Wilkins YANKEE CLIPPER Joe DiMaggio autographs a youngster’s baseball at the UM field Monday. The great former New York Yankee outfielder was on hand to see the world champion’s rookie team play the Cane varsity. See story, page 16. They’re Ready to Run Election Preparation Begins Official campaigning, to be-Sunday at noon, ignites the phase of election activities. A meeting of the election Sr will be held at 3 p.m. Men, Women Share Dorm By JAN NEUREN AIr „ "“"'cane staff Writer c°i«htioning and high bar-dent ^cep summer session cool in their co-educa-1 dorm. Paration of the 200 men be-d °Used on the second and , 00r from the 300 women _assigned to the fifth, sixth, p)Je"th floors will be ac--.n. e<i by introducing the d a barrier above the ttKr,°i°r stah's, by providing ar„i h°-th floor remain emp-y adjusting the elevators rj Wl not stop at the men’s ’’W for elorxvi tne summer housing eç Dout of a conference “resident Henry K. r f T? Uan Steinhoff, (Cn^“Urrimer Sessions. Chimed on Page 4) Wednesday in the upper lounge of the Student Union. All candidates are required to attend. Petitions will have been reviewed to determine each candidate’s validity and the eligibility list wiU be announced at this meeting. Petitions are due today at 4 p.m. in room 4 of the Student Union. Voting is scheduled for Thursday and Friday, March 28-29 in the lower lounge of the Student Union. The activities will culminate in the USG Banquet at 8 p.m., March 29, in the Everglades Hotel. Election winners will be announced after the dinner. Car-ni Gras trophies will be awarded and USG recognition certificates will be handed out. Those students chosen for Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities will receive scrolls. A $1000 check will be given to Dr. Hayden C. Nicholson, dean of the Medical School, for cancer research. The mo«eywasra«i by USG during Spirit Wee . President Henry K. Stanford will give a speech at this semi-formal affair and a combo will provide dinner music. The banquet is open to all students and tickets are $2.50 each. Half of the 300 available tickets have been sold. The remaining ones may be purchased in the information booth in the lower lounge of the Student Union. Woodrow Wilson Fellows Scholars Win $1500 For Graduate Study Five university scholars won Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1963-64. The five students are Frances R. Frankel, Alan A. Jabbour, Lawrence J. Kriloff, Thomas C. Potthoff, and Warren J. Rose. Announcement of the fellowships was made by Sir Hugh Taylor, president of the Wood-row Wilson National Fellow- ship Foundation. The grant carries a $1500 cash prize, allowance for dependents, plus tuition and fees at any graduate school in America or Canada. Frances R. Frankel, a government student, plans to attend either Johns Hopkins or Rutgers University and major in political science. Gambling Legalised For a 2 Night Stand By MARY BROCK Forty - two entries will turn Cami Gras into the biggest carnival in UM history. The festival will take place Thursday and Friday. “Little Vegas,” a gambling booth, will be a feature entry, containing a roulette wheel and a chorus line to entertain students. At the other end of the midway, Greek pledges and girls will fall from a wooden platform into a canvas ‘‘dunk booth.” Teddy bears, dolls, and “jump toys” will be prizes in the dart throws, ring tosses, and chance games. Construction on proposed booths will begin Monday outside the Student Union. A chart of the spaces taken will be available at the information desk. There will be a rotating Cami Gras trophy given to the organization contributing most to the success of Cami Gras. A service trophy will be presented to the group helping the most in service for the benefit of the carnival. Alan A. Jabbour, an English major, plans to do graduate work at Duke University. He is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Delta Theta Mu and played with the symphony orchestra. Lawrence J. Kriloff, a government and philosophy major, is now attending UM on an assistantship and is president of the philosophy club. He plans to attend Vanderbilt University in the fall. Warren J. Rose is president of Delta Theta Mu, a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Phi Eta Sigma. A psychology major, Rose won’t accept the Woodrow Wilson award, but he plans to accept another scholarship instead. Thomas C. Potthoff, a marine biology major, plans to do his graduate study here at the Marine Laboratory. “Our success in the compei-titions is ample evidence of thè academic quality of the uni* versity students,” said Dr. John I. McCollum, campus repre-i sentative for the Woodrow Wil-i son Foundation and a member of the regional selection com-? mittee. Receiving honorable mention were Victor B. Bailey, Alvin S. Cohan, Bette J. Gross, Stephen J. Mazurana and Carole A. Schindeler. Financed by Ford Foundation grants totaling $52 million, the program is designed to encourage students to earn doctorate degrees and, eventually, teach at the college level. A total of 1,475 winners were picked this year from 9,767 candidates named by faculty members at 907 colleges. lndigestibly Delicious Somebody Around Here's Being Spoon-Fed The market must be up on hot silverware. And somebody around here really cleaned up last month. The Student Union cafeteria, after a careful check of its February inventory, discovered a shortage of eating utensils. Five hundred forks, 300 knives, and 500 spoons short. “Gone, that’s where they went,” said Mrs. Dorothy Clot, cafeteria manager, “Just gone.” The somewhat perturbed iMMMnaaMnmHMHi manager doesn’t feel that she’s in a position to accuse anyone of taking the silverware, "but they didn’t walk out,” she said. The loss to the cafeteria for the month is over $600. In addition to the missing utensils, orders had to be put in for four dozen sets of glasses, 50 dozen cups and some new trays. “It’s pretty hard to do anything about the trays,” said the sadder but wiser cafeteria manager. “But have you noticed the forks now out for use? They’re plastic.”
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 15, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-03-15 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
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_19630315 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630315 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630315_001 |
Full Text | idy Gustafson >ach *til ’64 Qus Appointed Athletic Director Head football coach Andy “JLfson on Monday officially GUt over the job of athletic '““Lor. succeeding Jack Har-who died last month of cancer- rustafson will carry on as football coach through the 1963 season- “1 have confidence that Coach Gustafson will carry on in the -eat tradition that Mr. Haring brought to the office of athletic director,” said Presi-dent Henry K. Stanford, in announcing the appointment._______ of Harding since they played in the same backfield for the University of Pittsburgh, expressed a strong desire to run the athletic program with many of the ideas expressed by his predecessor. “It was always Mr. Harding’s plan to schedule the toughest competition he could find,” said Gustafson, ‘‘and I plan to carry that through to the letter. As for a conference,” he said’ “! think we do a lot bet- ter as an independent, drawing upon national schools for the teams we play.” Head coach since he took over from Harding in 1948, Gustafson has been credited with developing Miami into the football power it is today. “People ask me if it’s going to be hard, keeping my hand out of coaching when I’ve coached for 35 years,” said Gustafson. “Sure, it’ll be tough,” he answered himself. “But Mr. Har- Press Unfair See Page 7 The Mia 38th Year, No. 19 Lniversity of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 15, 1963 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 ding never interfered with my job when he was athletic director, and I guess that’s the way it’s got to be.” According to Dr. Stanford, no plans have been made for a successor to the head coaching spot. “We’ve had no prospects contact us,” he said, “and we’re not looking for anyone at this time.” Concerning assistant coach Walter Kichefski moving up to be head coach: “I have great regard for Coach Kichefski,” said Dr. Stanford, “but it’s really too early to tell.” According to the president, the task of finding a new head coach will begin before the end of spring, but the announcement of appointment will not come until December. “Coach Gustafson will coach until Jan. 1,-1964,” said Dr. Stanford. Then, catchini Jan. 2, should bid.” urne iimself, or a :Jfc I'h ¿»BfiAffir Lovers ¿Beware ee Page 5 Deferred Rush Plan To Remain By MIKE M IN ZELL Hurricane Staff Writer Inter-Fraternity Council’s plan to abolish deferred rush was refused Monday by President Henry K. Stanford. In a letter to IFC President Tom Ciresa, Stanford said deferred h would be retained. The decision was prompted by a unanimous recommendation of fraternity alumni advisors to continue the present system. At an IFC meeting Wednesday, Ciresa called for immediate ac-‘n from each fraternity. “Now that we have the final 'ision, let’s get out and work to vive the fraternity program,” e said. “We can give the system [a shot in the arm if we bring in ore pledges and sell the frater-ty system as a whole.” Mr Kenn Kerr, assistant dean men, reported that his office working on a program that ght allow some incoming fresh-en to pledge fraternities. Ihe system would be based on high school class rank, placement test scores, and first semester mid-term grades. (Continued on Page 4) Photo by Don Wilkins YANKEE CLIPPER Joe DiMaggio autographs a youngster’s baseball at the UM field Monday. The great former New York Yankee outfielder was on hand to see the world champion’s rookie team play the Cane varsity. See story, page 16. They’re Ready to Run Election Preparation Begins Official campaigning, to be-Sunday at noon, ignites the phase of election activities. A meeting of the election Sr will be held at 3 p.m. Men, Women Share Dorm By JAN NEUREN AIr „ "“"'cane staff Writer c°i«htioning and high bar-dent ^cep summer session cool in their co-educa-1 dorm. Paration of the 200 men be-d °Used on the second and , 00r from the 300 women _assigned to the fifth, sixth, p)Je"th floors will be ac--.n. e |
Archive | mhc_19630315_001.tif |
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