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rmino1^ 'ards 6'5" j * 6'7"B»b¡S R°se Winter dy s Seminoles and a stroi f0n «n shoo,. ih°ts made, 3ng time jinx. 3n- Fittingly ’o-winner, 'le- Miami r Stetson, Sioct orY would tow in the FiC win he crowt. etson stopped n’s condensed ed down He liters crowded I £•;: ir Deaver, ft its against The other UV I ! . men VemWat-k. The Hatters’ work and bal les were pe® Dalton Epting ¡ing teamwork and will prob-eason tourney, ; out to revenge! ies n’s Mia" s»Ns ricanes- «1 TS# urney- Religio11 gixxphäsized Page 8 The Mia University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 1, 1963 urricane l rfÄslrr Liberties MAR 1 Rented um*praee r- Telephone [2581 iMsms USGMoves Grant Students Power • See amendments, Page ]J Two measures giving students a better chanr* . memselves got the green light at an Under era og°Vern Government meeting on Monday. 8 duate Student The proposals, taking shape as USG constitute , Bents, must be passed again before they can go A dispute broke out over the ^ issue, a move to add more students to the Board of Re- yje«-. The proposal narrowly passed by a voice vote of the pgg council members. fl,e second action takes politics of the Honor Council by permitting the Council to select its ¡jrn members. The Board of Review functions suggestion body. The group idies USG legislative actions d sends recommendations to Resident Henry K. Stanford. Under the proposed system, ie organization will be composed of six students; three seniors and three juniors. The USG president will sit on the board as an ex-oflicio member. Sow he is not allowed to attend ie meetings. The Board presently consists of tree students and six faculty Inembers. Chief reason for the switch is Id “insure that students are adequately represented,” said Mike Klein, USG vice president. Main argument against the measure is that it won’t be effec-p6 duce the Board will still have approval on USG actions. In fact they can even turn down this amendment,” said A1 Cohan, chief justice of the Council. irt coai-Imoi ■ assisa ■Coum The second amendment, to add ire students to the Honor tcil, was unanimously passed. ; Ceiaf l!$G students, four juniors and four seniors, will sit on the Court. They will be chosen by ike Council’s recommendation wd will he approved by President Stanford. The chief justice is to be picked ^ the Court members. Presently r chief judge is named by the president. We want to insure continuity . .^ membership. Of special impor-®tace is the separation of the »or Council from the political netioning of TJSG,” explained whan. Kenn Kerr . . ‘too early’ Low Point Fraternity Marks Fall The grade point average of fraternity men — actives and pledges — dropped from a 1.3 to a 1.2 last semester, according to Kenn Kerr, assistant dean of men and advisor to fraternities. The 1.3 figure, registered last Spring, is the highest average recorded in the “all - fraternity” classification in recent years. The average of “active” Greeks also fell, from a 1.35 to 1.25. Sigma Nu President Mike Klein viewed the sliding averages as “definite proof” that deferred rush failed in its objective of raising grades. It was Klein’s motion in last month’s Inter-Fraternity Council meeting that led to the Greeks’ abolition of deferred rush. The move now awaits approval by the administration. Student Run Parking Court Gets OK Registration Dip Due to Graduates By JERRY Q. GREENFIELD and LEONARD TEEL The university lost about $320,500 worth of students this semester, according to Dr. Keith Smith, registrar. Figures show a drop of 641 day students from enrollment in the fall. The number, however, is not as great as the 890 predicted. Each student lost means $500 less income for the university. “Normally we lose 10 per cent of the student body after the fall semester,” explained Dr. Smith. “This time we lost only seven per cent.” Spring enrollment dropped for three reasons: a large senior class — about 450 — graduated last month, some students quit for financial reasons, and the university dismissed a small number for disciplinary or grade difficulties. Hit hardest was University College where enrollment dropped by nearly 500. Most of this number passed on to the upper divisions. Arts and Sciences was the only school for which totals climbed— from 1,170 for the fall to 1,175. All others fell off—Business, 50; Education, 28; Engineering, 44; and Music, 8. Guided Studies classes fell from 178 to 111, Law School totals dropped from 350 to 315 and Graduate School enrollment slipped from 415 to 411. The Medical School total stayed at 291. Total day enrollment now stands at 8,234 against 8,865 for the fall. Election Petitions Available All students who wish to run for office in the Undergraduate Student Government elections are asked to see Stuart Bloch, USG president, or Mike Klein, USG vice president, during this week. Petitions for would-be candi- dates will be available starting next Friday in the student activities office. University College upper sophomores transferring into the upper division schools must get change slips in the University College office. Only The Court Is Lit As Beach Auditorium Honors Jack Harding • • • seniors and families stand erect for moment of silence Pfctto By Dor Wilkins Jack Harding, 1898-1963 . ÌÉP-#- Athletic Director Dead At 65 • See editorial, Page 6 Funeral services for UM Athletic Director Jack Harding, who died Sunday of cancer, were Wednesday morning in the Church of the Little Flower. ♦------------ He was 65. Harding had been a part of the university athletic program for 25 years—both as head football coach and athletic director —and has been credited with the vast growth of that department. Though no official announcement of replacement has been made, head football coach Andy Gustafson seems slated for the athletic director’s job. According to a plan released in the local press, Gustafson will fill the dual role of coach and athletic director for the coming season, then be replaced by assistant coach Walt Kichefski for the 1964 season. “I do not feel this is the proper time to discuss a replacement for Mr. Harding,” said UM President Henry K. Stanford, when asked about the appointment. Harding played his early football at the University of Pittsburgh, and was quarterback on the same team on which Gustafson played fullback. He conducted math classes and coached at Scranton University and St. Thomas before coming here in 1937. World War II interrupted his coaching career. He returned to become athletic director in 1948. Harding became ill in August of this year, and had been in failing health ever since. He made only a brief appearance at a special silver anniversary dinner given in his honor just three weeks before his death. “Jack Harding was one of those rare people who was admired by everyone,” said UM ChanceUor Jay F. W. Pearson. Stanford Returns From Trip President Henry K. Stanford and Trustees Harry Hood Bassett and Louis J. Hector returned today from a junket to the eastern seaboard on a fact-finding trip about trends in scientific education in universities. They visited Harvard, Yale, Mass. Institute of Technology and officials of the Ford Foundation in their capacity as members of UM’s Scientific Education Fund Committee. By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor Parking violators will appeal ticket fines directly to a student court slated to be set up before the end of this month. Formation of the student parking appeals court was unanimously passed in amendment form at the Undergraduate Student Government meeting on Monday. “The parking appeals court has the approval of both the Board of Review and President Henry K. Stanford,” said Stuart Bloch, USG president. “All we need is technical consent.” Only formality left is a second council vote on the amendment. This second vote is scheduled for 3 p.m. on Monday. Under the proposed system, the parking court comes under USG jurisdiction. Four students will be selected as judges to hear the cases. The four students, to be chosen by the USG president with the council’s okay, will serve until June. Bill Swearengin, senior government major, is the only student named to the court so far. Three others will be chosen within the next two weeks. All students interested in working as judges must contact Bloch in the USG office during this week. “I hope all students who tryout have 1.5 averages. The court work will take up a lot of time,” Bloch said. Three officials will act as court advisors. Miss Martha McGee, assistant to the dean of women, is the only advisor named. Two others, an administrator from the dean of men’s office and a faculty member, have not been appointed yet. “The faculty members won’t decide the cases. They will just guide us on procedure since they have had more experience in this matter,” explained Bloch. The court will convene twice or three times each week depending upon the number of students appealing traffic tickets. To appeal a traffic ticket, a student will have to make an appointment with a traffic secretary to be on duty frc**v 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. daily in the^U'JO office. Only first and second offenders can appear before the court. Three-time losers will be sent to the appropriate dean to face possible suspension from school. Under the system approved by Dr. Stanford, first and second offenders shell out $3. If not paid in 14 days, the fine is doubled. Peepin’ Thimbles Little Spies Among Us The student who squirms in his seat will be reported by a peeping thimble. The thimble—a sensitive device being developed by University College engineers—will record each student’s restlessness, blood pressure, pulse and skin temperature. It will be ready for use in two years. Data picked up by the device will not be used to trap the student, according to C. Henderson Beal, assistant director of the Communications Services Division. “This is simply a way of gathering data for judging the whole University College program,” Beal said. “Biological reactions can tell psychologists how effective lectures are.” The thimble—or something very small—will be nsed to save a student the bother of wearing cumbersome gear. The individual data will be channeled into a giant computer to make generalizations on the University College television system of teaching. Then the psychologists will interpret the data for professors. The professors will then change their tunes.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 1, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-03-01 |
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_19630301 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630301 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630301_001 |
Full Text | rmino1^ 'ards 6'5" j * 6'7"B»b¡S R°se Winter dy s Seminoles and a stroi f0n «n shoo,. ih°ts made, 3ng time jinx. 3n- Fittingly ’o-winner, 'le- Miami r Stetson, Sioct orY would tow in the FiC win he crowt. etson stopped n’s condensed ed down He liters crowded I £•;: ir Deaver, ft its against The other UV I ! . men VemWat-k. The Hatters’ work and bal les were pe® Dalton Epting ¡ing teamwork and will prob-eason tourney, ; out to revenge! ies n’s Mia" s»Ns ricanes- «1 TS# urney- Religio11 gixxphäsized Page 8 The Mia University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, March 1, 1963 urricane l rfÄslrr Liberties MAR 1 Rented um*praee r- Telephone [2581 iMsms USGMoves Grant Students Power • See amendments, Page ]J Two measures giving students a better chanr* . memselves got the green light at an Under era og°Vern Government meeting on Monday. 8 duate Student The proposals, taking shape as USG constitute , Bents, must be passed again before they can go A dispute broke out over the ^ issue, a move to add more students to the Board of Re- yje«-. The proposal narrowly passed by a voice vote of the pgg council members. fl,e second action takes politics of the Honor Council by permitting the Council to select its ¡jrn members. The Board of Review functions suggestion body. The group idies USG legislative actions d sends recommendations to Resident Henry K. Stanford. Under the proposed system, ie organization will be composed of six students; three seniors and three juniors. The USG president will sit on the board as an ex-oflicio member. Sow he is not allowed to attend ie meetings. The Board presently consists of tree students and six faculty Inembers. Chief reason for the switch is Id “insure that students are adequately represented,” said Mike Klein, USG vice president. Main argument against the measure is that it won’t be effec-p6 duce the Board will still have approval on USG actions. In fact they can even turn down this amendment,” said A1 Cohan, chief justice of the Council. irt coai-Imoi ■ assisa ■Coum The second amendment, to add ire students to the Honor tcil, was unanimously passed. ; Ceiaf l!$G students, four juniors and four seniors, will sit on the Court. They will be chosen by ike Council’s recommendation wd will he approved by President Stanford. The chief justice is to be picked ^ the Court members. Presently r chief judge is named by the president. We want to insure continuity . .^ membership. Of special impor-®tace is the separation of the »or Council from the political netioning of TJSG,” explained whan. Kenn Kerr . . ‘too early’ Low Point Fraternity Marks Fall The grade point average of fraternity men — actives and pledges — dropped from a 1.3 to a 1.2 last semester, according to Kenn Kerr, assistant dean of men and advisor to fraternities. The 1.3 figure, registered last Spring, is the highest average recorded in the “all - fraternity” classification in recent years. The average of “active” Greeks also fell, from a 1.35 to 1.25. Sigma Nu President Mike Klein viewed the sliding averages as “definite proof” that deferred rush failed in its objective of raising grades. It was Klein’s motion in last month’s Inter-Fraternity Council meeting that led to the Greeks’ abolition of deferred rush. The move now awaits approval by the administration. Student Run Parking Court Gets OK Registration Dip Due to Graduates By JERRY Q. GREENFIELD and LEONARD TEEL The university lost about $320,500 worth of students this semester, according to Dr. Keith Smith, registrar. Figures show a drop of 641 day students from enrollment in the fall. The number, however, is not as great as the 890 predicted. Each student lost means $500 less income for the university. “Normally we lose 10 per cent of the student body after the fall semester,” explained Dr. Smith. “This time we lost only seven per cent.” Spring enrollment dropped for three reasons: a large senior class — about 450 — graduated last month, some students quit for financial reasons, and the university dismissed a small number for disciplinary or grade difficulties. Hit hardest was University College where enrollment dropped by nearly 500. Most of this number passed on to the upper divisions. Arts and Sciences was the only school for which totals climbed— from 1,170 for the fall to 1,175. All others fell off—Business, 50; Education, 28; Engineering, 44; and Music, 8. Guided Studies classes fell from 178 to 111, Law School totals dropped from 350 to 315 and Graduate School enrollment slipped from 415 to 411. The Medical School total stayed at 291. Total day enrollment now stands at 8,234 against 8,865 for the fall. Election Petitions Available All students who wish to run for office in the Undergraduate Student Government elections are asked to see Stuart Bloch, USG president, or Mike Klein, USG vice president, during this week. Petitions for would-be candi- dates will be available starting next Friday in the student activities office. University College upper sophomores transferring into the upper division schools must get change slips in the University College office. Only The Court Is Lit As Beach Auditorium Honors Jack Harding • • • seniors and families stand erect for moment of silence Pfctto By Dor Wilkins Jack Harding, 1898-1963 . ÌÉP-#- Athletic Director Dead At 65 • See editorial, Page 6 Funeral services for UM Athletic Director Jack Harding, who died Sunday of cancer, were Wednesday morning in the Church of the Little Flower. ♦------------ He was 65. Harding had been a part of the university athletic program for 25 years—both as head football coach and athletic director —and has been credited with the vast growth of that department. Though no official announcement of replacement has been made, head football coach Andy Gustafson seems slated for the athletic director’s job. According to a plan released in the local press, Gustafson will fill the dual role of coach and athletic director for the coming season, then be replaced by assistant coach Walt Kichefski for the 1964 season. “I do not feel this is the proper time to discuss a replacement for Mr. Harding,” said UM President Henry K. Stanford, when asked about the appointment. Harding played his early football at the University of Pittsburgh, and was quarterback on the same team on which Gustafson played fullback. He conducted math classes and coached at Scranton University and St. Thomas before coming here in 1937. World War II interrupted his coaching career. He returned to become athletic director in 1948. Harding became ill in August of this year, and had been in failing health ever since. He made only a brief appearance at a special silver anniversary dinner given in his honor just three weeks before his death. “Jack Harding was one of those rare people who was admired by everyone,” said UM ChanceUor Jay F. W. Pearson. Stanford Returns From Trip President Henry K. Stanford and Trustees Harry Hood Bassett and Louis J. Hector returned today from a junket to the eastern seaboard on a fact-finding trip about trends in scientific education in universities. They visited Harvard, Yale, Mass. Institute of Technology and officials of the Ford Foundation in their capacity as members of UM’s Scientific Education Fund Committee. By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor Parking violators will appeal ticket fines directly to a student court slated to be set up before the end of this month. Formation of the student parking appeals court was unanimously passed in amendment form at the Undergraduate Student Government meeting on Monday. “The parking appeals court has the approval of both the Board of Review and President Henry K. Stanford,” said Stuart Bloch, USG president. “All we need is technical consent.” Only formality left is a second council vote on the amendment. This second vote is scheduled for 3 p.m. on Monday. Under the proposed system, the parking court comes under USG jurisdiction. Four students will be selected as judges to hear the cases. The four students, to be chosen by the USG president with the council’s okay, will serve until June. Bill Swearengin, senior government major, is the only student named to the court so far. Three others will be chosen within the next two weeks. All students interested in working as judges must contact Bloch in the USG office during this week. “I hope all students who tryout have 1.5 averages. The court work will take up a lot of time,” Bloch said. Three officials will act as court advisors. Miss Martha McGee, assistant to the dean of women, is the only advisor named. Two others, an administrator from the dean of men’s office and a faculty member, have not been appointed yet. “The faculty members won’t decide the cases. They will just guide us on procedure since they have had more experience in this matter,” explained Bloch. The court will convene twice or three times each week depending upon the number of students appealing traffic tickets. To appeal a traffic ticket, a student will have to make an appointment with a traffic secretary to be on duty frc**v 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. daily in the^U'JO office. Only first and second offenders can appear before the court. Three-time losers will be sent to the appropriate dean to face possible suspension from school. Under the system approved by Dr. Stanford, first and second offenders shell out $3. If not paid in 14 days, the fine is doubled. Peepin’ Thimbles Little Spies Among Us The student who squirms in his seat will be reported by a peeping thimble. The thimble—a sensitive device being developed by University College engineers—will record each student’s restlessness, blood pressure, pulse and skin temperature. It will be ready for use in two years. Data picked up by the device will not be used to trap the student, according to C. Henderson Beal, assistant director of the Communications Services Division. “This is simply a way of gathering data for judging the whole University College program,” Beal said. “Biological reactions can tell psychologists how effective lectures are.” The thimble—or something very small—will be nsed to save a student the bother of wearing cumbersome gear. The individual data will be channeled into a giant computer to make generalizations on the University College television system of teaching. Then the psychologists will interpret the data for professors. The professors will then change their tunes. |
Archive | mhc_19630301_001.tif |
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