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exPected to . J 1 ktle. defend h D°'vnes j, ot S2iree^m4> behind FS?, J ,d DPaSareUa ft ^ are ^ Ck ^ going t„7H " Gene »«- Hurricane«, ~ the weakened in s sim* r‘ant bad sprinter iw? FUr daTshes'’ neither ^ Jun Chase r mfia*-Hutc’hiftV *the 'da with Pefp p J °«« .in»*“?« ir°nger than ivrt”, >fer a"d Dift'SD« th’Wn (1:54) 0fft j,n Ædist^L;'1' "«“fer-i ke pand-getters, v"" moa ¡TJ* P-j«»P. Phi, ¿¿* LtZ'1 p’ John &a“ W events> and others roster UP helpful points. mge Roberts !1 in the mile. The Hurri-filer is ready for Sato-)w. Is Roberts? , After Race in the hole >hn Karabasz .. lost to pal Sneaky Snake page 5 The Mia urrica E»sm if »iwR* Year, No. 25 I nuersit^ of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, Mat MAY 10 1963 Groups Swing In 25th M M * M -* -k Formal jhnds Greek Week Tonight ST. 2581 Recording star Della Reese is Etured guest at the Inter-Fra-aity Council formal which ¿jgs Greek Week activities to close at 8 p-m. tonight in the fontainbleau Hotel. jjiss Reese will sing her two „its, “And That Reminds Me” and •Don’t You Know.” In her hour-g show she will be aecompan-by Rickey Thomas’ nine-ce dance band. Also on tap will be rock and roll singer Ivan Bloch. Dizzy Jones’ Continentals and Frank Williams’ Racketeers will provide continuous dance music. Honored guests will be fraternity men recognized during Greek Week as outstanding man of the year by their fraternities. They are David Christopher, Bradley Hubert, John Abdallah, Hugh Quinn, Bob Schwartz, Larry Plummer, George Pappas, Charles Bobbitt, David Weissman, Michael Kratze, Stephen Stern, |l!el Fischler and Howard Hansen. "This should be the best 1FC lance ever staged,” said dance thairman George Pappas who estimated a crowd of 1,500 would attend the dance. mm ‘‘Somebody Stop That Chariot” Cries Charioteer As He Pursues His Fleeing Vehicle . . . unseated rider got late start in Greek Week race, but chariot started on time Oscar Dooly Elected New Trustee Head Oscar E. Dooly, prominent Miami realtor, was selected Monday as the new chairman of the Board of Trustees. Vice chairman since 1953, Dooly was elected to fill the un-txpired term of Daniel J. Mahoney who died on April 1. He serves until January 1964, when officers will be elected at the fflnual meeting. , George E. Whitten was named rice chairman. Whitten, elected to fee Board in 1945, succeeds Dooly s chairman of the executive ttnmittee. 'lax Orovitz, a member of Board since 1955, was appointed chairman of the exe-tutive committee by Dooly. Nugh P. Emerson was given a *at on the executive board. Dooly, 63, has been a member the Board of Trustees since 11 A.M. Until Noon He came to Miami in 1930, time to play an important role its development. he was formerly a director of Florida National Bank and .‘^t Company of Miami and shed the War Fund Campaign World War n. ,a addition to his real estate ft'Vity Dooly organized ^talent broker the San an m- business and lari, “Jal1 Francisco stock ctlai>ge in the 1930’s. Oscar Dooly . new board power He has been mayor of Miami Shores, president of the Orange Bowl Committee, the Dade County Research Foundation and chairman of the finance committee of the Dade County Community Chest and the Parking and Traffic Improvement Committee. Honors Day Closes Classes For Hour on Wednesday In traditional caps and gowns, university trustees, administrators, and faculty members will laud campus scholars at the fourth annual Academic Honors Day program, 11 a.m. on Wednesday. Dean’s List students with a 2.5 average for at least two consecutive semesters wear black stoles and march in a procession to the assembly at the Library lecture hall. All classes will be dismissed from 11 a.m. to noon so students may attend the assembly. Students participating in the program may be excused from classes at 10 a.m. Delivering the invocation is Dr. W. Ivan Hoy, chairman of the religion department. Keynote speaker will be President Henry K. Stanford. Five students receive special recognition for being on the Dean’s List for three and one-half years. They are John W. Cooper, Bette Joan Goss, Alan Follender, C a r o le Schindeler and Frances Wasserman. Twenty-five students add achievement bars to academic pins for being on the Dean’s List for two years. Dr. H. Franklin Williams, vice president and director of community affairs, confers the honors on these scholars. Students who were on the Dean’s List either last spring or fall semester get certificates of academic achieve- outstanding ment. “I hope that students and parents attend this program. It is the one day of the year that scholars receive the recognition they deserve,” said Dr. Taylor Alexander, chairman of the Academic Honors Day committee. Anniversary Turnout Light Folk songs and religious hymns form part of Songfest-Swingfest set for 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Dade County Auditorium. In this 25th anniversary of the gala musical, 11 campus organizations are competing for trophies awarded by Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity that sponsors the event The turnout of only 11 groups is one of the smallest in the function’s history. In 1962, 20 groups participated in Songfest-Swingfest, and 17 took part in ’61. The contest has three divisions and prizes will be awarded for the best singing group in each category. Cups go to the most outstanding group in men’s competition, women’s competition and mixed chorus. A highlight of the festival is the presentation of honorary Phi Mu Alpha keys to President Henry K. Stanford and Congressman Dante Fascell. Carol Lynn Blum and Jerry DeGenaro plus a Folk Quartet provide the entertainment between numbers. Chuck Zink of WTVJ (Channel 4) acts as moderator. All trophies will be awarded at the Swingfest dance at 10:30 p.m. in the Miami Springs Villa. Coed curfews will be extend, ed until 2 aan. so they can listen to Rex Darrow and his band which plays until 1 a.m. Tickets at $1.75 a person are available in the Student Union breezeway or may be purchased from any Phi Mu Alpha member. Competing for the women’s trophy are sororities Alpha Chi Omega, Delta Zeta, Phi Sigma Sigma, Delta Gamma and Kappa Kappa Gamma. Candidates in the men’s division are Alpha Epsilon Pi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi and Zeta Beta Tau. The only independent organization entered is the Aquinas Center. Dr. Stanford: Lecturer for a Day Students in Social Science |®2 class on Monday will real-.2 ?et the idea that Big Brother * hatching. At two lectures on “The • azi Mentality,” given at 11 iLtn- and 3 p.m., the special speaker on the big television screen will be President Henry K. Stanford. The lecture, a regular part of the University College studies in history and government, will be presented in University College rooms 120, 130, 140 and 160 in the morning, and 120, 130 and 140 in the afternoon. “Dr. Stanford was a graduate student at the University of Heidelberg during the rise of the Third Reich,” said Dr. William Munson, chairman of the social science division. Both sessions are open to the public, without charge. r$5 Council9 For Talk Passes USG A representative council with membership from each campus organization is being set up to provide a forum for student opinion. The council will serve as a suggestion unit to Undergraduate Student Government. It will also investigate problems and submit findings to USG. Each club must pay a $5 fee to USG at the beginning of each semester to meet expenses, according to Jim Hilderbrand, USG vice president. The chairman of the representative council will be appointed by the USG president and will be subject to USG approval. Council representatives will be elected by each organization. “We want to set up a council to get competent representatives from all organizations,” said Hilderbrand. “This council will help clear up any communication conflicts that arise between the groups.” Pilots By Charley Pewers ON A DAMP NOTE this music student sloshes hack to the dorm after a typical Miami sun shower. Raincoat protected his clothes, and a case saved the horn, but his shoes—along with his spirits — were a total loss.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, May 10, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-05-10 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (12 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_19630510 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630510 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630510_001 |
Full Text | exPected to . J 1 ktle. defend h D°'vnes j, ot S2iree^m4> behind FS?, J ,d DPaSareUa ft ^ are ^ Ck ^ going t„7H " Gene »«- Hurricane«, ~ the weakened in s sim* r‘ant bad sprinter iw? FUr daTshes'’ neither ^ Jun Chase r mfia*-Hutc’hiftV *the 'da with Pefp p J °«« .in»*“?« ir°nger than ivrt”, >fer a"d Dift'SD« th’Wn (1:54) 0fft j,n Ædist^L;'1' "«“fer-i ke pand-getters, v"" moa ¡TJ* P-j«»P. Phi, ¿¿* LtZ'1 p’ John &a“ W events> and others roster UP helpful points. mge Roberts !1 in the mile. The Hurri-filer is ready for Sato-)w. Is Roberts? , After Race in the hole >hn Karabasz .. lost to pal Sneaky Snake page 5 The Mia urrica E»sm if »iwR* Year, No. 25 I nuersit^ of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, Mat MAY 10 1963 Groups Swing In 25th M M * M -* -k Formal jhnds Greek Week Tonight ST. 2581 Recording star Della Reese is Etured guest at the Inter-Fra-aity Council formal which ¿jgs Greek Week activities to close at 8 p-m. tonight in the fontainbleau Hotel. jjiss Reese will sing her two „its, “And That Reminds Me” and •Don’t You Know.” In her hour-g show she will be aecompan-by Rickey Thomas’ nine-ce dance band. Also on tap will be rock and roll singer Ivan Bloch. Dizzy Jones’ Continentals and Frank Williams’ Racketeers will provide continuous dance music. Honored guests will be fraternity men recognized during Greek Week as outstanding man of the year by their fraternities. They are David Christopher, Bradley Hubert, John Abdallah, Hugh Quinn, Bob Schwartz, Larry Plummer, George Pappas, Charles Bobbitt, David Weissman, Michael Kratze, Stephen Stern, |l!el Fischler and Howard Hansen. "This should be the best 1FC lance ever staged,” said dance thairman George Pappas who estimated a crowd of 1,500 would attend the dance. mm ‘‘Somebody Stop That Chariot” Cries Charioteer As He Pursues His Fleeing Vehicle . . . unseated rider got late start in Greek Week race, but chariot started on time Oscar Dooly Elected New Trustee Head Oscar E. Dooly, prominent Miami realtor, was selected Monday as the new chairman of the Board of Trustees. Vice chairman since 1953, Dooly was elected to fill the un-txpired term of Daniel J. Mahoney who died on April 1. He serves until January 1964, when officers will be elected at the fflnual meeting. , George E. Whitten was named rice chairman. Whitten, elected to fee Board in 1945, succeeds Dooly s chairman of the executive ttnmittee. 'lax Orovitz, a member of Board since 1955, was appointed chairman of the exe-tutive committee by Dooly. Nugh P. Emerson was given a *at on the executive board. Dooly, 63, has been a member the Board of Trustees since 11 A.M. Until Noon He came to Miami in 1930, time to play an important role its development. he was formerly a director of Florida National Bank and .‘^t Company of Miami and shed the War Fund Campaign World War n. ,a addition to his real estate ft'Vity Dooly organized ^talent broker the San an m- business and lari, “Jal1 Francisco stock ctlai>ge in the 1930’s. Oscar Dooly . new board power He has been mayor of Miami Shores, president of the Orange Bowl Committee, the Dade County Research Foundation and chairman of the finance committee of the Dade County Community Chest and the Parking and Traffic Improvement Committee. Honors Day Closes Classes For Hour on Wednesday In traditional caps and gowns, university trustees, administrators, and faculty members will laud campus scholars at the fourth annual Academic Honors Day program, 11 a.m. on Wednesday. Dean’s List students with a 2.5 average for at least two consecutive semesters wear black stoles and march in a procession to the assembly at the Library lecture hall. All classes will be dismissed from 11 a.m. to noon so students may attend the assembly. Students participating in the program may be excused from classes at 10 a.m. Delivering the invocation is Dr. W. Ivan Hoy, chairman of the religion department. Keynote speaker will be President Henry K. Stanford. Five students receive special recognition for being on the Dean’s List for three and one-half years. They are John W. Cooper, Bette Joan Goss, Alan Follender, C a r o le Schindeler and Frances Wasserman. Twenty-five students add achievement bars to academic pins for being on the Dean’s List for two years. Dr. H. Franklin Williams, vice president and director of community affairs, confers the honors on these scholars. Students who were on the Dean’s List either last spring or fall semester get certificates of academic achieve- outstanding ment. “I hope that students and parents attend this program. It is the one day of the year that scholars receive the recognition they deserve,” said Dr. Taylor Alexander, chairman of the Academic Honors Day committee. Anniversary Turnout Light Folk songs and religious hymns form part of Songfest-Swingfest set for 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Dade County Auditorium. In this 25th anniversary of the gala musical, 11 campus organizations are competing for trophies awarded by Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity that sponsors the event The turnout of only 11 groups is one of the smallest in the function’s history. In 1962, 20 groups participated in Songfest-Swingfest, and 17 took part in ’61. The contest has three divisions and prizes will be awarded for the best singing group in each category. Cups go to the most outstanding group in men’s competition, women’s competition and mixed chorus. A highlight of the festival is the presentation of honorary Phi Mu Alpha keys to President Henry K. Stanford and Congressman Dante Fascell. Carol Lynn Blum and Jerry DeGenaro plus a Folk Quartet provide the entertainment between numbers. Chuck Zink of WTVJ (Channel 4) acts as moderator. All trophies will be awarded at the Swingfest dance at 10:30 p.m. in the Miami Springs Villa. Coed curfews will be extend, ed until 2 aan. so they can listen to Rex Darrow and his band which plays until 1 a.m. Tickets at $1.75 a person are available in the Student Union breezeway or may be purchased from any Phi Mu Alpha member. Competing for the women’s trophy are sororities Alpha Chi Omega, Delta Zeta, Phi Sigma Sigma, Delta Gamma and Kappa Kappa Gamma. Candidates in the men’s division are Alpha Epsilon Pi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi and Zeta Beta Tau. The only independent organization entered is the Aquinas Center. Dr. Stanford: Lecturer for a Day Students in Social Science |®2 class on Monday will real-.2 ?et the idea that Big Brother * hatching. At two lectures on “The • azi Mentality,” given at 11 iLtn- and 3 p.m., the special speaker on the big television screen will be President Henry K. Stanford. The lecture, a regular part of the University College studies in history and government, will be presented in University College rooms 120, 130, 140 and 160 in the morning, and 120, 130 and 140 in the afternoon. “Dr. Stanford was a graduate student at the University of Heidelberg during the rise of the Third Reich,” said Dr. William Munson, chairman of the social science division. Both sessions are open to the public, without charge. r$5 Council9 For Talk Passes USG A representative council with membership from each campus organization is being set up to provide a forum for student opinion. The council will serve as a suggestion unit to Undergraduate Student Government. It will also investigate problems and submit findings to USG. Each club must pay a $5 fee to USG at the beginning of each semester to meet expenses, according to Jim Hilderbrand, USG vice president. The chairman of the representative council will be appointed by the USG president and will be subject to USG approval. Council representatives will be elected by each organization. “We want to set up a council to get competent representatives from all organizations,” said Hilderbrand. “This council will help clear up any communication conflicts that arise between the groups.” Pilots By Charley Pewers ON A DAMP NOTE this music student sloshes hack to the dorm after a typical Miami sun shower. Raincoat protected his clothes, and a case saved the horn, but his shoes—along with his spirits — were a total loss. |
Archive | mhc_19630510_001.tif |
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