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The Mia urrican 41st Yeah, No. 6 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, October 29, 1965 Pioneer Space Scientist « »um 0ûT 29 1965 uiuir a MO 1-2511, Ext. 2942 Von Braun To Speak Wednesday Holdsworth Services Held Last Saturday Dean Holdsworth New Ticket Procedure For Students All students will be given re-aerved seat tickets for these games. You will need your ID card to pick up your ticket If you want a date ticket, you must purchase it when you pick up your own ticket These will be in limited sections where you can also obtain tickets alongside your own for your parents at the regular price of $5-50 Burial services were held last Saturday for Dr. John T. Holdsworth, dean of UM’s School of Business Administration from 1926 to 1941. Dr. Holdsworth died at his Miami home last Friday at the age of 90. He came to this country from Ontario, Canada in 1894. He moved to Philadelphia and attended Drexel Institute. He received his A.B. degree from New York University in 1904 and his Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Before moving to Florida, he was the dean of the School of Business Administration at the University of Pittsburg vice-president of the Bank of Pittsburg and the president of the Philadelphia Land Bank. He was also a professor of ♦ money and banking at Princeton. The noted author and lecturer was a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Sigma Chi, and Iron Arrow fraternities at the UM. He is survived by his granddaughter, Mrs. Adele Cemey of Westport, Conn., and a niece living in California. Hie above-mentioned reserved seat tickets, along with date tickets, will be available on a first-come basis starting Monday, Nov. 1, in the front hallway of the Student Union Building, from 9:30 am. to 4 JO pm. The best seats will go to the first students to pick them up, and they will be available for one week only. Be sure to have your ID card. There is no increase in the price of date tickets. They will be $2.00 and must be be used by a member of the opposite sex. If fraternities and sororities wish to sit together, they should delegate someone to come in and pick up all the tickets at one time. Bring ID cards. USG Sponsers Top Speakers Von Braun Tops List The famed space pioneer, Dr. Werner Von Braun of NASA’s George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, will speak on American space projects Wednesday, Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in the Ibis room of the Student Union. Dr. Von Braun will be the first-------- Dr. Werner Von Braun, director of die George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, will be featured as the drat speaker in the USG Lecture Series this year. The lecture wiD be held in the Ibis Dining Room of the Student Union at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Dr. Von Braun will appear at UM while la Miami for a convention of the Institute of Electric and Electrical Engineers. speaker in this semester’s University of Miami Undergraduate Student Government Lecture Series. The Marshall Center of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is in charge of developing NASA’s large launch vehicles and conducting related research. As director of the Marshall Center, Von Braun is technically in charge of the nation’s vehicle development that will enable this country to place men on the moon and return them safely to earth. Dr. Von Braun, now a U.S. citizen, was instrumental in developing the first liquid fuel rockets while a member of the German government’s ordnance dept, in 1932. He was also air director of the project that produced the V2 rocket. In the closing months of World War D, he led more than 1M Gorman scientists to the West and surrendered to the Sigma Chi Derbies Fly In Mudfight Twelve normally petite and demure UM sorority members will battle for pennies tomorrow in the 18th annual Sigma MRHA Holds Careers Night Next Thursday Careers Night, presented annually by MRHA, will be held November 4, at 8:30 p.m , on the second floor of the Student Union. The purpose of the program is to initiate, through informative seminars, discussions, and conferences among businessmen, faculty, and students, a greater student understanding of postgraduate vocations. It gives the student an opportunity to ask questions about his chosen field. Vocations such as law, medicine, education, business administration and engineering will be presented. All students are invited to attend. Free refreshments will be served. Homecoming Dance Billets On Sale Mon. Tickets for the University of Miami’s Homecoming Dance, which will be held at the Deauville Hotel on Miami Beach, will go on sale on Monday in the Student Activities Office. “We would advise all students and student organizations who intend to buy tickets or blocks of tickets to do so as soon as possible, because the numbers of available tickets for the dance at the Deauville is especially limited," said Dance Chairman John Shipman. Shipman pointed out that tickets are also being made available to students of the University of Florida who have been invited to attend all of the Homecoming activities. Dress for the Homecoming Dance will be semi-formal and men will be required to wear dark suits or dinner jackets. Absolutely no alcoholic beverages may be brought into the Napoleon Room, where the dance is to be held. Students may, however, use the two bars which are located in the hotel itaelf. Chi Derby Day battle of the mud pit. The mud pit fight, in which the sorority girls will attempt to recover change which has been thrown into the mud hole, will highlight Derby Day this year. Adding beauty to this annual event, will be the crowning of the Derby Day Queen later in the afternoon. UM Architectural School, Again Leads Nation For the third straight year, UM won first place in state and national design competition in architectural engineering. UM student Ted Hoffman took the first place award of $150 in the Annual Florida Concrete and Product Association design competition between UM and the University of Florida. This year’s project was to design an auto showroom and service center for downtown Gainesville. Gordon Gilbert, another UM student, finished in third place. Earlier this month, William Liddy placed second in the National Architecture Competition sponsored by the National Illuminating Engineering Society. Lid-dy’s award-winning entries were complete plans and a model for lighting a modem art museum. “This year’s contest was so close,” explained Derby Day chairman Bud Root, “that instead of the usual five finalists, we will have six this time.“ Finalists, who were judged on the basis of poise and beauty are Joann Fishenkeller and Jan Jester, Delta Gamma; Jane Jones, Delta Zeta; Susan Stella, Tri Delt; and Ronnie Schulman and Valerie Yasner from Alpha Epsilon Phi. Derby Day will begin at noon tomorrow with a car parade originating at the Panhellenir Building. Balloons, egg tosses, pole races as well as a variety of track and field event» will begin at 1 p.m. on the intramural field. Trophies for the winning teams will be awarded at a mixer at 2 pm. Sunday, Oct. 31, at the Sigma Chi house, 6100 San Am-aro Drive. He came to the US. In 1945, USG Sponsors Prof. Debate On Viet Nam As part of Culture Week, USG Lecture Series will sponsor a debate entitled “UJ5. Involvement in Viet Nam,” at 4 p.m., Nov. 4, in Student Union Ballroom. Dr. James Tedeschi will represent the negative side and Mr. Raymond Leddy will take the affirmative. Pathologist Named New ACS Director Dr. W. A. D. Anderson, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pathology, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Fla., was elected a Di-rector-at-Large of the American Cancer Society. He U also Director of Pathology Laboratories, Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami. Dr. Anderson is a member of the National Society’s Fellowship Committee and the Ad Hoc Committee on Cystology He is on the Research Committee of the Florida Division of the Society. Dr. Anderson is a member of many professional organizations, including the American Society of Pathology and Bacteriologists, American Society for Experimental Pathology, American Medical Association, International Academy for Pathology, Florida Medical Association, Florida Society of Pathologists, Dade County Medical Association, Southeastern Florida Society of Pathologists. He is Past President of the College of American Pathologists and President-elect of The American Medical Writers’ Association. Dr. Anderson has published three books on pathology, many scientific papers and has served on the board of several scientific journals. He is a consultant for the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology; Division of Cancer Control, Bureau of State Services, and the Veterans Administration Hospital, Coral Gables, Fla. ! He received the Scientific Products Foundation Award of the College of American Pathol-; ogists in 1959 and the Ward Burdick Award of the American So-| ciety of Clinical Pathologists in '1965. under contract to the U.S. Army, and directed the high altitude lrings of captured V2 rockets at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. Following a stint as project director of the Army’s guided missile development unit at Fort Bliss, Texas, the Army transferred the research group, in 1950, to Huntsville, where its rocketry activities were centered. In 1960, this research group was transferred to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration by order of President Eisenhower. Since the activation of the Marshall Center, the Saturn I, Saturn IB, Saturn IB/Centaur, and the Saturn V space vehicle projects were begun, and man has traveled in space. The Saturn I has been launched successfully from Cape Kennedy nine times. The Redstone booster, employed in the Mercury man - in - space program, successfully placed two astronauts in sub-orbital flights. Dr. Von Braun will be attending the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers three-day symposium on "Future of Space Programs” starting next Tuesday at the Fountainbleau. Other speakers scheduled for the Undergraduate Student Government Lecture Series are as follows: Senator Thruston Morton Dr. Charles Sheldon Assoc. Justice William Douglas Dr. Ralph Bunche Erskine Caldwell Howland Sargeant Dr. Edward Teller (tentative) Senator Gale W. McGee UM 'Police’: Just Guards For Security The UM campus “Security Guard” is hired for security reasons only and has no power of seizure or arrest, according to representatives of the physical plant. Matt Borek, director of the physical plant, and Harry MeigB, buildings operations supervisor, appeared before the USG Council meeting Monday to participate in the group’s investigation of the Campus Patrol and its functions. Meigs told the council that the patrol is called Security Guard, instead of police because they have no police pow-vested in them. They are not required by law to attend police school, as the Sheriff’s Department and city police are. The Guard has a total of 31 men working 12 posts, 24 hours a day. They must follow regulations set down by the Traffic Control Board. In the event that a complaint arises about one of the Guards, one should contact Meigs at the Physical Plant. The council suspended the regular meeting so it could devote time to this investigation.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 29, 1965 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1965-10-29 |
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_19651029 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19651029 |
Digital ID | MHC_19651029_001 |
Full Text | The Mia urrican 41st Yeah, No. 6 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, October 29, 1965 Pioneer Space Scientist « »um 0ûT 29 1965 uiuir a MO 1-2511, Ext. 2942 Von Braun To Speak Wednesday Holdsworth Services Held Last Saturday Dean Holdsworth New Ticket Procedure For Students All students will be given re-aerved seat tickets for these games. You will need your ID card to pick up your ticket If you want a date ticket, you must purchase it when you pick up your own ticket These will be in limited sections where you can also obtain tickets alongside your own for your parents at the regular price of $5-50 Burial services were held last Saturday for Dr. John T. Holdsworth, dean of UM’s School of Business Administration from 1926 to 1941. Dr. Holdsworth died at his Miami home last Friday at the age of 90. He came to this country from Ontario, Canada in 1894. He moved to Philadelphia and attended Drexel Institute. He received his A.B. degree from New York University in 1904 and his Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Before moving to Florida, he was the dean of the School of Business Administration at the University of Pittsburg vice-president of the Bank of Pittsburg and the president of the Philadelphia Land Bank. He was also a professor of ♦ money and banking at Princeton. The noted author and lecturer was a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Sigma Chi, and Iron Arrow fraternities at the UM. He is survived by his granddaughter, Mrs. Adele Cemey of Westport, Conn., and a niece living in California. Hie above-mentioned reserved seat tickets, along with date tickets, will be available on a first-come basis starting Monday, Nov. 1, in the front hallway of the Student Union Building, from 9:30 am. to 4 JO pm. The best seats will go to the first students to pick them up, and they will be available for one week only. Be sure to have your ID card. There is no increase in the price of date tickets. They will be $2.00 and must be be used by a member of the opposite sex. If fraternities and sororities wish to sit together, they should delegate someone to come in and pick up all the tickets at one time. Bring ID cards. USG Sponsers Top Speakers Von Braun Tops List The famed space pioneer, Dr. Werner Von Braun of NASA’s George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, will speak on American space projects Wednesday, Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in the Ibis room of the Student Union. Dr. Von Braun will be the first-------- Dr. Werner Von Braun, director of die George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, will be featured as the drat speaker in the USG Lecture Series this year. The lecture wiD be held in the Ibis Dining Room of the Student Union at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Dr. Von Braun will appear at UM while la Miami for a convention of the Institute of Electric and Electrical Engineers. speaker in this semester’s University of Miami Undergraduate Student Government Lecture Series. The Marshall Center of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is in charge of developing NASA’s large launch vehicles and conducting related research. As director of the Marshall Center, Von Braun is technically in charge of the nation’s vehicle development that will enable this country to place men on the moon and return them safely to earth. Dr. Von Braun, now a U.S. citizen, was instrumental in developing the first liquid fuel rockets while a member of the German government’s ordnance dept, in 1932. He was also air director of the project that produced the V2 rocket. In the closing months of World War D, he led more than 1M Gorman scientists to the West and surrendered to the Sigma Chi Derbies Fly In Mudfight Twelve normally petite and demure UM sorority members will battle for pennies tomorrow in the 18th annual Sigma MRHA Holds Careers Night Next Thursday Careers Night, presented annually by MRHA, will be held November 4, at 8:30 p.m , on the second floor of the Student Union. The purpose of the program is to initiate, through informative seminars, discussions, and conferences among businessmen, faculty, and students, a greater student understanding of postgraduate vocations. It gives the student an opportunity to ask questions about his chosen field. Vocations such as law, medicine, education, business administration and engineering will be presented. All students are invited to attend. Free refreshments will be served. Homecoming Dance Billets On Sale Mon. Tickets for the University of Miami’s Homecoming Dance, which will be held at the Deauville Hotel on Miami Beach, will go on sale on Monday in the Student Activities Office. “We would advise all students and student organizations who intend to buy tickets or blocks of tickets to do so as soon as possible, because the numbers of available tickets for the dance at the Deauville is especially limited," said Dance Chairman John Shipman. Shipman pointed out that tickets are also being made available to students of the University of Florida who have been invited to attend all of the Homecoming activities. Dress for the Homecoming Dance will be semi-formal and men will be required to wear dark suits or dinner jackets. Absolutely no alcoholic beverages may be brought into the Napoleon Room, where the dance is to be held. Students may, however, use the two bars which are located in the hotel itaelf. Chi Derby Day battle of the mud pit. The mud pit fight, in which the sorority girls will attempt to recover change which has been thrown into the mud hole, will highlight Derby Day this year. Adding beauty to this annual event, will be the crowning of the Derby Day Queen later in the afternoon. UM Architectural School, Again Leads Nation For the third straight year, UM won first place in state and national design competition in architectural engineering. UM student Ted Hoffman took the first place award of $150 in the Annual Florida Concrete and Product Association design competition between UM and the University of Florida. This year’s project was to design an auto showroom and service center for downtown Gainesville. Gordon Gilbert, another UM student, finished in third place. Earlier this month, William Liddy placed second in the National Architecture Competition sponsored by the National Illuminating Engineering Society. Lid-dy’s award-winning entries were complete plans and a model for lighting a modem art museum. “This year’s contest was so close,” explained Derby Day chairman Bud Root, “that instead of the usual five finalists, we will have six this time.“ Finalists, who were judged on the basis of poise and beauty are Joann Fishenkeller and Jan Jester, Delta Gamma; Jane Jones, Delta Zeta; Susan Stella, Tri Delt; and Ronnie Schulman and Valerie Yasner from Alpha Epsilon Phi. Derby Day will begin at noon tomorrow with a car parade originating at the Panhellenir Building. Balloons, egg tosses, pole races as well as a variety of track and field event» will begin at 1 p.m. on the intramural field. Trophies for the winning teams will be awarded at a mixer at 2 pm. Sunday, Oct. 31, at the Sigma Chi house, 6100 San Am-aro Drive. He came to the US. In 1945, USG Sponsors Prof. Debate On Viet Nam As part of Culture Week, USG Lecture Series will sponsor a debate entitled “UJ5. Involvement in Viet Nam,” at 4 p.m., Nov. 4, in Student Union Ballroom. Dr. James Tedeschi will represent the negative side and Mr. Raymond Leddy will take the affirmative. Pathologist Named New ACS Director Dr. W. A. D. Anderson, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pathology, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Fla., was elected a Di-rector-at-Large of the American Cancer Society. He U also Director of Pathology Laboratories, Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami. Dr. Anderson is a member of the National Society’s Fellowship Committee and the Ad Hoc Committee on Cystology He is on the Research Committee of the Florida Division of the Society. Dr. Anderson is a member of many professional organizations, including the American Society of Pathology and Bacteriologists, American Society for Experimental Pathology, American Medical Association, International Academy for Pathology, Florida Medical Association, Florida Society of Pathologists, Dade County Medical Association, Southeastern Florida Society of Pathologists. He is Past President of the College of American Pathologists and President-elect of The American Medical Writers’ Association. Dr. Anderson has published three books on pathology, many scientific papers and has served on the board of several scientific journals. He is a consultant for the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology; Division of Cancer Control, Bureau of State Services, and the Veterans Administration Hospital, Coral Gables, Fla. ! He received the Scientific Products Foundation Award of the College of American Pathol-; ogists in 1959 and the Ward Burdick Award of the American So-| ciety of Clinical Pathologists in '1965. under contract to the U.S. Army, and directed the high altitude lrings of captured V2 rockets at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. Following a stint as project director of the Army’s guided missile development unit at Fort Bliss, Texas, the Army transferred the research group, in 1950, to Huntsville, where its rocketry activities were centered. In 1960, this research group was transferred to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration by order of President Eisenhower. Since the activation of the Marshall Center, the Saturn I, Saturn IB, Saturn IB/Centaur, and the Saturn V space vehicle projects were begun, and man has traveled in space. The Saturn I has been launched successfully from Cape Kennedy nine times. The Redstone booster, employed in the Mercury man - in - space program, successfully placed two astronauts in sub-orbital flights. Dr. Von Braun will be attending the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers three-day symposium on "Future of Space Programs” starting next Tuesday at the Fountainbleau. Other speakers scheduled for the Undergraduate Student Government Lecture Series are as follows: Senator Thruston Morton Dr. Charles Sheldon Assoc. Justice William Douglas Dr. Ralph Bunche Erskine Caldwell Howland Sargeant Dr. Edward Teller (tentative) Senator Gale W. McGee UM 'Police’: Just Guards For Security The UM campus “Security Guard” is hired for security reasons only and has no power of seizure or arrest, according to representatives of the physical plant. Matt Borek, director of the physical plant, and Harry MeigB, buildings operations supervisor, appeared before the USG Council meeting Monday to participate in the group’s investigation of the Campus Patrol and its functions. Meigs told the council that the patrol is called Security Guard, instead of police because they have no police pow-vested in them. They are not required by law to attend police school, as the Sheriff’s Department and city police are. The Guard has a total of 31 men working 12 posts, 24 hours a day. They must follow regulations set down by the Traffic Control Board. In the event that a complaint arises about one of the Guards, one should contact Meigs at the Physical Plant. The council suspended the regular meeting so it could devote time to this investigation. |
Archive | MHC_19651029_001.tif |
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