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faluable Most player page 18 The Mia urricane Most Silent Week Page 5 Year, No 26 J-Mversity of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, May 17, Retterjhpperation Withm Schools US G To Debate On C ^Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 MAY 17 ¿963 ystem IFC OK’s freshman Rush Plan Inter-Fraternity Council okayed a measure to let first semester jeshmen go Greek after mid-leim grades are released. To be eligible for rush the freshman must not have received ¡my mid-term grades, and must lave made a good score on placement tests. The prospective „ledge must also have ranked high in high school class standing. As part of the fall rush pro-{ram, the Greeks are going to invite upperclassmen with a 1.0 average to stay in the fraternity houses for a weekend before school starts. “We plan to have social functions and meetings to tell the independents about advantages in 'joining a fraternity,” said Stuart Bloch, IFC president. To become a pledge, a man nust have a 1.0 cumulative aver-! and 12 credits. Anyone with 11.25 semester average is eligible i pledge, although he needs a 1.0 overall to be initiated. “We also set up the Mahoney award to recognize fraternity scholarship. The fraternity with the highest average gets a trophy that will be awarded yearly,” ex-i plained Bloch. At the meeting last week, the judiciary board was set up. This board decides on cases involving the conduct of each chapter. Elected to the board «ere Truman McGee, Joe Mik-lasz, and Dave Weissman. President Bloch also set IFC idmimstrative policy for the year. We do not intend to act as policemen’, but rather ask each fraternity man to use his com-aon-sense when making any decision relative to any phase of week life,” Bloch stated. I* New Proposal Abolishes All School Governments A proposal to replace school governments with class governments will be discussed at the Undergraduate Student Government meeting at 3:30 p.m. Monday. Under the proposed system, students would vote for three representatives in the fresh-_ man class, sophomore class, junior class and senior class. ■ ‘So Goodbye’ I Haste Wastes Short Dates Bashful Spectator Hides From Hot Sun and Camera During Honors Day . . . over 800 students were honored, see column 1 The USG council is currently set up under the school government grouping with Arts and Sciences having two representatives and University College having two student seats. All other schools have only one student on the council. “Basically I think class governments represent a better cross-section of the student body than school governments because the schools are so diversified,” said Mark Clasby, USG president. Under the new arrangement each of the schools would have their own class system. “This would make student government more powerful. We could get more accomplished with better cooperation within each school,” said Clasby. USG’s chief executive also announced new cabinet members. Bill Boyd has been named secretary of community affairs. Lois Milman will be chairman of the lecture series and Larry Duggan is secretary of spirit. (Continued on Page 4) Plus a Failure In The Course Honor Council Puts Cheating Student On Strict Disciplinary Probation The Honor Council last week suspended a student for both summer sessions and the fall semester for using a written aid during an examination. The student, who used a crib sheet, also received a disciplinary failure in the course and Over 800 Students Praised 4th Honors Day Program --- . , , «mu- «f an educational and George E. Whitt« ban 800 students heard ident Henry K. Stan-ik about the function iversity at Academic ^ay on Wednesday at irth annual ceremony, about 600 undergrad-f various scholastic ents, was conducted chter Library Building “The value of an educational institution is measured by how well it accomplishes its purpose,” said Dr. Stanford. And the central purpose is to make students think-to give hie to their intellectual capacities. Before President Stanford s address, Honors Day Chairman Dr. Taylor R. Alexander introduced Ruth L. Sutton. William Pawley, Max Orovitz inside The Hurricane ook At a Year Gone By ed in this issue is reported by three staff YVocus y Of A Year,” a series Each of the four s orl rehensive reviews of on one aspect o ma r’s campus events as portance. The image makers who have left are discussed on page student gains in freedoms are on page 8, a critical review of the Ring Theatre is on page and a wrap-up of post-season sports is on page 18. and George E. Whitten, the four trustees at the affair. Presentation of awards by Dr. H. Franklin Williams, vice president, began with the honoring of five students who have maintained a Dean’s List average of at least 2.5 for seven semesters. Following them were 25 students on the Dean’s List for three years. These scholars sported black stoles. The wraps will be exchanged for a gold bar to attach to academic pins. The names of two-semester Dean's List students were announced. One-semester Dean's List scholars were also recognized. Individually honored were the five winners of the Wood-row Wilson Foundation Fellowships - Frances Frankel Alan Lawrence Krilolt, is Petthoff and Warren Carole Dawn Reinhart, Scholarship winner, was placed on disciplinary probation for an indefinite period. “This is one of the cases heard within the past few weeks,” said Alvin Cohan, chief justice. At the Honor Council meeting on Wednesday, Brian Logan was named new chief justice. Logan, a junior zoology major, succeeds Cohan. Logan, 20, is minoring in chemistry. Logan is chairman of the homecoming committee and is a member of Sigma Nu, social fraternity; Phi Eta Sigma, freshmen men’s academic honorary; Omicron Delta Kappa, highest national men’s honorary, and Delta Theta Mu. “I’d like to see some changes made within the next year,” said Logan. “I’d like to see a change of attitude in some of the faculty members and students in regards to the violations,” he said. When it comes time to stand up and be counted, those 720 Dorm girls are going to have it down pat. A group of them — 87 to the count — got some literal practice last week when they were all stood up ... en masse. “Lack of communication,” explained Assistant Dean of Women Louise Mills, who was tired of explaining. “We were asked to supply dates for members of the American Institute of Architecture student convention,” she said. “But something went wrong.” The ALA was having its annual convention on Miami Beach last week, and the University of Miami and University of Florida were guest hosts. According to Mrs. Mills, the girls who volunteered were to be called by rrlembers of the ALA and told what time they would be picked up for the Thursday night luau. By five o’clock Thursday afternoon none of the 87 girls had been called. So they called Mrs. Mills . . . who didn’t know whom to call. “It was all very embarrassing,” said Engineering School Dean Theodore Weyher. “The boys found out the girls had a 10 p.m. curfew, and decided to get their dates from Barry College.” Jabbour, Thomas Rose. ( Fulbright ruions“1 --------- ■ was also recognized. Ibis Available On Monday The 1963 Ibis will be distribut-ed on Monday, Tuesday and j j Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 j p.m. at the Ibis office located in the Student Services Building. Students who have paid activ-I ity fees for both semesters may get books after presenting identi- j fication cards at the Ibis office. J -Students who have paid activ- j ity fees for only one semester can | receive the yearbook upon pay- j ment of $2.25 and presentation of I identification cards. rnotos By unaries powers Presidential Reflection Gets Powdered For TV . . . make-up for Dr. Stanford, story on page 2
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, May 17, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-05-17 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (18 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_19630517 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630517 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630517_001 |
Full Text | faluable Most player page 18 The Mia urricane Most Silent Week Page 5 Year, No 26 J-Mversity of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, May 17, Retterjhpperation Withm Schools US G To Debate On C ^Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 MAY 17 ¿963 ystem IFC OK’s freshman Rush Plan Inter-Fraternity Council okayed a measure to let first semester jeshmen go Greek after mid-leim grades are released. To be eligible for rush the freshman must not have received ¡my mid-term grades, and must lave made a good score on placement tests. The prospective „ledge must also have ranked high in high school class standing. As part of the fall rush pro-{ram, the Greeks are going to invite upperclassmen with a 1.0 average to stay in the fraternity houses for a weekend before school starts. “We plan to have social functions and meetings to tell the independents about advantages in 'joining a fraternity,” said Stuart Bloch, IFC president. To become a pledge, a man nust have a 1.0 cumulative aver-! and 12 credits. Anyone with 11.25 semester average is eligible i pledge, although he needs a 1.0 overall to be initiated. “We also set up the Mahoney award to recognize fraternity scholarship. The fraternity with the highest average gets a trophy that will be awarded yearly,” ex-i plained Bloch. At the meeting last week, the judiciary board was set up. This board decides on cases involving the conduct of each chapter. Elected to the board «ere Truman McGee, Joe Mik-lasz, and Dave Weissman. President Bloch also set IFC idmimstrative policy for the year. We do not intend to act as policemen’, but rather ask each fraternity man to use his com-aon-sense when making any decision relative to any phase of week life,” Bloch stated. I* New Proposal Abolishes All School Governments A proposal to replace school governments with class governments will be discussed at the Undergraduate Student Government meeting at 3:30 p.m. Monday. Under the proposed system, students would vote for three representatives in the fresh-_ man class, sophomore class, junior class and senior class. ■ ‘So Goodbye’ I Haste Wastes Short Dates Bashful Spectator Hides From Hot Sun and Camera During Honors Day . . . over 800 students were honored, see column 1 The USG council is currently set up under the school government grouping with Arts and Sciences having two representatives and University College having two student seats. All other schools have only one student on the council. “Basically I think class governments represent a better cross-section of the student body than school governments because the schools are so diversified,” said Mark Clasby, USG president. Under the new arrangement each of the schools would have their own class system. “This would make student government more powerful. We could get more accomplished with better cooperation within each school,” said Clasby. USG’s chief executive also announced new cabinet members. Bill Boyd has been named secretary of community affairs. Lois Milman will be chairman of the lecture series and Larry Duggan is secretary of spirit. (Continued on Page 4) Plus a Failure In The Course Honor Council Puts Cheating Student On Strict Disciplinary Probation The Honor Council last week suspended a student for both summer sessions and the fall semester for using a written aid during an examination. The student, who used a crib sheet, also received a disciplinary failure in the course and Over 800 Students Praised 4th Honors Day Program --- . , , «mu- «f an educational and George E. Whitt« ban 800 students heard ident Henry K. Stan-ik about the function iversity at Academic ^ay on Wednesday at irth annual ceremony, about 600 undergrad-f various scholastic ents, was conducted chter Library Building “The value of an educational institution is measured by how well it accomplishes its purpose,” said Dr. Stanford. And the central purpose is to make students think-to give hie to their intellectual capacities. Before President Stanford s address, Honors Day Chairman Dr. Taylor R. Alexander introduced Ruth L. Sutton. William Pawley, Max Orovitz inside The Hurricane ook At a Year Gone By ed in this issue is reported by three staff YVocus y Of A Year,” a series Each of the four s orl rehensive reviews of on one aspect o ma r’s campus events as portance. The image makers who have left are discussed on page student gains in freedoms are on page 8, a critical review of the Ring Theatre is on page and a wrap-up of post-season sports is on page 18. and George E. Whitten, the four trustees at the affair. Presentation of awards by Dr. H. Franklin Williams, vice president, began with the honoring of five students who have maintained a Dean’s List average of at least 2.5 for seven semesters. Following them were 25 students on the Dean’s List for three years. These scholars sported black stoles. The wraps will be exchanged for a gold bar to attach to academic pins. The names of two-semester Dean's List students were announced. One-semester Dean's List scholars were also recognized. Individually honored were the five winners of the Wood-row Wilson Foundation Fellowships - Frances Frankel Alan Lawrence Krilolt, is Petthoff and Warren Carole Dawn Reinhart, Scholarship winner, was placed on disciplinary probation for an indefinite period. “This is one of the cases heard within the past few weeks,” said Alvin Cohan, chief justice. At the Honor Council meeting on Wednesday, Brian Logan was named new chief justice. Logan, a junior zoology major, succeeds Cohan. Logan, 20, is minoring in chemistry. Logan is chairman of the homecoming committee and is a member of Sigma Nu, social fraternity; Phi Eta Sigma, freshmen men’s academic honorary; Omicron Delta Kappa, highest national men’s honorary, and Delta Theta Mu. “I’d like to see some changes made within the next year,” said Logan. “I’d like to see a change of attitude in some of the faculty members and students in regards to the violations,” he said. When it comes time to stand up and be counted, those 720 Dorm girls are going to have it down pat. A group of them — 87 to the count — got some literal practice last week when they were all stood up ... en masse. “Lack of communication,” explained Assistant Dean of Women Louise Mills, who was tired of explaining. “We were asked to supply dates for members of the American Institute of Architecture student convention,” she said. “But something went wrong.” The ALA was having its annual convention on Miami Beach last week, and the University of Miami and University of Florida were guest hosts. According to Mrs. Mills, the girls who volunteered were to be called by rrlembers of the ALA and told what time they would be picked up for the Thursday night luau. By five o’clock Thursday afternoon none of the 87 girls had been called. So they called Mrs. Mills . . . who didn’t know whom to call. “It was all very embarrassing,” said Engineering School Dean Theodore Weyher. “The boys found out the girls had a 10 p.m. curfew, and decided to get their dates from Barry College.” Jabbour, Thomas Rose. ( Fulbright ruions“1 --------- ■ was also recognized. Ibis Available On Monday The 1963 Ibis will be distribut-ed on Monday, Tuesday and j j Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 j p.m. at the Ibis office located in the Student Services Building. Students who have paid activ-I ity fees for both semesters may get books after presenting identi- j fication cards at the Ibis office. J -Students who have paid activ- j ity fees for only one semester can | receive the yearbook upon pay- j ment of $2.25 and presentation of I identification cards. rnotos By unaries powers Presidential Reflection Gets Powdered For TV . . . make-up for Dr. Stanford, story on page 2 |
Archive | mhc_19630517_001.tif |
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