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lu an 'I1“*«.«», ill out. VIlami by ry was on (¡k c advantages e Confeti ■° Stesoti ; n just be st sixe ' Pair of 5'io* 'as one of tit tinues to score Piuiella, and mding and dt. JlVI’s toughest ;ht kill UM's ie FIC game, d give UM j sat record and iirne\ ig2 s from the Ni >nal Invitatimi N:-l larden in St ole tourney take offers good puli' York City as ¡8 i a» New Y®| sci i many sto ids in W iooI. Mi¡^ ni tin? Ss* mind the in choosing® ht ' *0 tc^ Cane Cagers Tournament Bound feil Bv BOB GOLUB 2*- — , „ „ happy basketball Accepted a bid to the tea® hfInvitational Tournament d national post-season "itS Tin four years. ^ T is Plaved in Ma^T p ^ d e n at New York, ^arch 14-23- *° Canes, hoping the third ThCis ctSied, will be out to °®e iinx in the opening break ® i both previous post t0nt appearances, Miami has ffto survive the first round action- • ;fo+inn was extended The mV j Was immediately M°nday, the squad. They had 3CCfiuer to accept the NIT v0ted earl bid if both Th. e.,.y »- ca»e tn , +he NIT accept- iautmatically eliminates the ^really great,” said cage ¿ Bruce H^. -hen he «£££ S^rmy boys JTorVe school.” The Hurricanes last played m the NIT in 1961 when they ® „,Wd in a first round were edged u» . A thriller by St. Lotus, 58-56 St Louis went on to the finals, but were defeated. The only other major tournament experience came in th I960 NCAA Mideast regional when an injury-stricken UM squad fell in the first round to Western Kentucky, 107-84. Western was in turn dumped by the eventual champ, Ohio State. The Canes were the first team to accept a bid to this year’s Garden event, the oldest post season basketball tournament in the na-tion. At press time there were three other teams selected for the field, Memphis State, Providence and Canisus. Of Providence, UM knows. Miami upset the Friars 82-75, early in the season at Rhode Island, and it’s no secret that the pride of the East is going to be out for revenge, should the two ihools meet in New York. “The Friars were completely unaware of us at that first meet-said sophomore star Rick Barry. “But if we play the type of ball *e’re capable of,” he continued, V should win the tournament.” The Mia urricañe University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, February 22, 1963 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 Monday Aft ernoon Debate Set On USG Actions Pinitos By Don Wilkins What a foiffletehce d (jam Oh, what a morale beating our two little cheerleaders took when the Canes were toppled by Loyola last week. Leslie Lilt (upper, left) was so stunned by the upsetting circumstances she couldn’t talk. But her companion, Micki Lind was at no loss for a means of expression. A las, all the woes of foregone tragedies were forgotten with the butchering of Tampa on Monday night. And Leslie (left) —- the only cheerleader at the game — looks as though she’s never known anything but victory and smiles. Engineers Exposition Opens Today By MIKE MUNZELL Hurricane Staff Writer A robot car and man-made lightning are two of the exhibits featured at the Engineer bg Exposition tonight and Saturday. Ue Electrical Department built a tiny automobile design-ri to guide itself along a white ™e- According to engineering student Stephen Toback, an Adhesive Tape-Seeking Cars Man-Made Lighting Bolts optical device allows the car to follow a line of adhesive tape. A group of students working together produced a ma- chine that will throw a bolt of lightning across a space of V/2 feet. The power of this authentic lightning ranges Wrong Ones Really Liked Those Classes %/ _ , - *t*/y iuhri/’/’W/ — this tie.' T.heJollow name of the subject has been 5e'v weeks of this had trouble getting her classes « »1- - .C__J foot J°^owing is an accurate presentation of nly the name of the subject has been for ] , — * vwv» weeKS or unis semester Mary Butler attended classes, just like 14,000 0t“® students. Except Mary attended the *T°ng classes. really don’t know how it have happened,” said the pr*% senior. "file classes were very in-and I enjoyed them "densely ... but they 'tere«’t mine.” A® elementary education Mary signed up on the ° day of registration, and U LlUUk/XV. -----0 ‘Everything was fine the first week or so of classes,” said Mary. “I had history at the proper time and my education classes seemed okay. “But when the history professor lectured, he talked about the post-Civil War United States, and I expected the discovery of America.” One by one, that moment of truth occured in every class. After straightening the mess out, Mary retraced her actions at registration. changed to protect the innocent — this newspaper — from a law suit. “I copied all the room numbers out of my registration book, instead of using the coupons,” she confessed. “I must have read down hill, and that’s how I got the right department but the wrong classes. Shaking her head, Mary pondered a reason for it all: “I wonder if my condition has anything to do with it?” she asked herself. Mary learned she was pregnant shortly before registration week. from 90 to 100,000 volts. A jet engine will also be displayed and fired every hour. This complex Ramjet engine was built in England. Admission to the exposition, to be held at the J. Neville McArthur Engineering Building, is free. Hours are from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. this evening and noon to 10 p.m. tomorrow. Lyin’ Kiss The Engineering School’s kissometer, reported in last week’s Hurricane as a machine to measure the “passion of a kiss,” isn’t. It just doesn’t measure passion. But most of the United States thinks it does. After the kissometer story appeared here, it was picked up by The Miami Herald — checking with the same reference as did the ’Cane — and in turn went out over the national wire services. And the Engineering School’s upset. “The thing measures the moisture in a kiss,” said a representative. “Not passion . . . moisture. Nothing else.” School Governments Get Direct Challenges By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor Two amendments to the Undergraduate Student Government constitution will be discussed and voted on during its meeting at 3 p.m. Monday in the Student Union upper lounge. One measure is to completely overhaul the six individual school governments. Students may attend the USG open meeting and defend these groups. The second proposal would change the makeup of the Board of Review to let an equal number of students and university officials sit on the committee. Greeks Stand Pat On Rush The Inter-Fraternity Council executive committee is drafting a letter to President Henry K. Stanford explaining why deferred rush should be dropped this semester. “We expect to have the letter on Dr. Stanford’s desk by 8 a.m. on Monday,” said Tom Ciresa, IFC president. The message follows a meeting between Dr. Stanford and IFC leaders on the merits of dumping deferred rush. IFC voted to kill deferred rush last week. The Greeks decided to permit all men to rush and pledge fraternity regardless of class standing or grade average. “I am awaiting a formal report from the office of the dean of students,” said Dr. Stanford. “But I think that we should wait until later in the semester before changing policy.” Dr. Sanford, UM’s chief ex-exutive since July, said he needed more time to investigate the present conditions before agreeing to switch the system. “We feel we need to have an open rush this semester,” said Ciresa. Members of the IFC executive committee are Tom Ciresa, Pi Kappa Alpha; Brad Hubert, Sigma Chi; John Abdullah, Kappa Sigma, and Mike Klein, Sigma Nu. Under the present system the schools send representatives to USG meetings. USG also controls the budgets of the indi-.. vidual governments. The only school governments that have done much work this year are the University College group and the Engineering School organization, according to Stuart Bloch, USG president. “We must try to arrange it so that if USG sponsors a program, the school governments must work to support the program,” said Bloch. The second USG reform, an action to change the membership of the Board of Review, is necessary to “insure that students are adequately represented,” according to Mike Klein, USG vice president. “With a membership switch the board should have a direct line into the motives behind the student government legislation which it must approve,” Klein said. Tempo’s Coining The life and times of coeds who habitate neighborhood beaches is the subject of the featured picture story in the first “Tempo” of the semester, coming out Tuesday. The price is 25 cents. Plata By Bab Nitti Frantic Coed Is Disturbed By Cameraman . . . joyful ‘702’ open house, page 5
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, February 22, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-02-22 |
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_19630222 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630222 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630222_001 |
Full Text | lu an 'I1“*«.«», ill out. VIlami by ry was on (¡k c advantages e Confeti ■° Stesoti ; n just be st sixe ' Pair of 5'io* 'as one of tit tinues to score Piuiella, and mding and dt. JlVI’s toughest ;ht kill UM's ie FIC game, d give UM j sat record and iirne\ ig2 s from the Ni >nal Invitatimi N:-l larden in St ole tourney take offers good puli' York City as ¡8 i a» New Y®| sci i many sto ids in W iooI. Mi¡^ ni tin? Ss* mind the in choosing® ht ' *0 tc^ Cane Cagers Tournament Bound feil Bv BOB GOLUB 2*- — , „ „ happy basketball Accepted a bid to the tea® hfInvitational Tournament d national post-season "itS Tin four years. ^ T is Plaved in Ma^T p ^ d e n at New York, ^arch 14-23- *° Canes, hoping the third ThCis ctSied, will be out to °®e iinx in the opening break ® i both previous post t0nt appearances, Miami has ffto survive the first round action- • ;fo+inn was extended The mV j Was immediately M°nday, the squad. They had 3CCfiuer to accept the NIT v0ted earl bid if both Th. e.,.y »- ca»e tn , +he NIT accept- iautmatically eliminates the ^really great,” said cage ¿ Bruce H^. -hen he «£££ S^rmy boys JTorVe school.” The Hurricanes last played m the NIT in 1961 when they ® „,Wd in a first round were edged u» . A thriller by St. Lotus, 58-56 St Louis went on to the finals, but were defeated. The only other major tournament experience came in th I960 NCAA Mideast regional when an injury-stricken UM squad fell in the first round to Western Kentucky, 107-84. Western was in turn dumped by the eventual champ, Ohio State. The Canes were the first team to accept a bid to this year’s Garden event, the oldest post season basketball tournament in the na-tion. At press time there were three other teams selected for the field, Memphis State, Providence and Canisus. Of Providence, UM knows. Miami upset the Friars 82-75, early in the season at Rhode Island, and it’s no secret that the pride of the East is going to be out for revenge, should the two ihools meet in New York. “The Friars were completely unaware of us at that first meet-said sophomore star Rick Barry. “But if we play the type of ball *e’re capable of,” he continued, V should win the tournament.” The Mia urricañe University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, February 22, 1963 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 Monday Aft ernoon Debate Set On USG Actions Pinitos By Don Wilkins What a foiffletehce d (jam Oh, what a morale beating our two little cheerleaders took when the Canes were toppled by Loyola last week. Leslie Lilt (upper, left) was so stunned by the upsetting circumstances she couldn’t talk. But her companion, Micki Lind was at no loss for a means of expression. A las, all the woes of foregone tragedies were forgotten with the butchering of Tampa on Monday night. And Leslie (left) —- the only cheerleader at the game — looks as though she’s never known anything but victory and smiles. Engineers Exposition Opens Today By MIKE MUNZELL Hurricane Staff Writer A robot car and man-made lightning are two of the exhibits featured at the Engineer bg Exposition tonight and Saturday. Ue Electrical Department built a tiny automobile design-ri to guide itself along a white ™e- According to engineering student Stephen Toback, an Adhesive Tape-Seeking Cars Man-Made Lighting Bolts optical device allows the car to follow a line of adhesive tape. A group of students working together produced a ma- chine that will throw a bolt of lightning across a space of V/2 feet. The power of this authentic lightning ranges Wrong Ones Really Liked Those Classes %/ _ , - *t*/y iuhri/’/’W/ — this tie.' T.heJollow name of the subject has been 5e'v weeks of this had trouble getting her classes « »1- - .C__J foot J°^owing is an accurate presentation of nly the name of the subject has been for ] , — * vwv» weeKS or unis semester Mary Butler attended classes, just like 14,000 0t“® students. Except Mary attended the *T°ng classes. really don’t know how it have happened,” said the pr*% senior. "file classes were very in-and I enjoyed them "densely ... but they 'tere«’t mine.” A® elementary education Mary signed up on the ° day of registration, and U LlUUk/XV. -----0 ‘Everything was fine the first week or so of classes,” said Mary. “I had history at the proper time and my education classes seemed okay. “But when the history professor lectured, he talked about the post-Civil War United States, and I expected the discovery of America.” One by one, that moment of truth occured in every class. After straightening the mess out, Mary retraced her actions at registration. changed to protect the innocent — this newspaper — from a law suit. “I copied all the room numbers out of my registration book, instead of using the coupons,” she confessed. “I must have read down hill, and that’s how I got the right department but the wrong classes. Shaking her head, Mary pondered a reason for it all: “I wonder if my condition has anything to do with it?” she asked herself. Mary learned she was pregnant shortly before registration week. from 90 to 100,000 volts. A jet engine will also be displayed and fired every hour. This complex Ramjet engine was built in England. Admission to the exposition, to be held at the J. Neville McArthur Engineering Building, is free. Hours are from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. this evening and noon to 10 p.m. tomorrow. Lyin’ Kiss The Engineering School’s kissometer, reported in last week’s Hurricane as a machine to measure the “passion of a kiss,” isn’t. It just doesn’t measure passion. But most of the United States thinks it does. After the kissometer story appeared here, it was picked up by The Miami Herald — checking with the same reference as did the ’Cane — and in turn went out over the national wire services. And the Engineering School’s upset. “The thing measures the moisture in a kiss,” said a representative. “Not passion . . . moisture. Nothing else.” School Governments Get Direct Challenges By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor Two amendments to the Undergraduate Student Government constitution will be discussed and voted on during its meeting at 3 p.m. Monday in the Student Union upper lounge. One measure is to completely overhaul the six individual school governments. Students may attend the USG open meeting and defend these groups. The second proposal would change the makeup of the Board of Review to let an equal number of students and university officials sit on the committee. Greeks Stand Pat On Rush The Inter-Fraternity Council executive committee is drafting a letter to President Henry K. Stanford explaining why deferred rush should be dropped this semester. “We expect to have the letter on Dr. Stanford’s desk by 8 a.m. on Monday,” said Tom Ciresa, IFC president. The message follows a meeting between Dr. Stanford and IFC leaders on the merits of dumping deferred rush. IFC voted to kill deferred rush last week. The Greeks decided to permit all men to rush and pledge fraternity regardless of class standing or grade average. “I am awaiting a formal report from the office of the dean of students,” said Dr. Stanford. “But I think that we should wait until later in the semester before changing policy.” Dr. Sanford, UM’s chief ex-exutive since July, said he needed more time to investigate the present conditions before agreeing to switch the system. “We feel we need to have an open rush this semester,” said Ciresa. Members of the IFC executive committee are Tom Ciresa, Pi Kappa Alpha; Brad Hubert, Sigma Chi; John Abdullah, Kappa Sigma, and Mike Klein, Sigma Nu. Under the present system the schools send representatives to USG meetings. USG also controls the budgets of the indi-.. vidual governments. The only school governments that have done much work this year are the University College group and the Engineering School organization, according to Stuart Bloch, USG president. “We must try to arrange it so that if USG sponsors a program, the school governments must work to support the program,” said Bloch. The second USG reform, an action to change the membership of the Board of Review, is necessary to “insure that students are adequately represented,” according to Mike Klein, USG vice president. “With a membership switch the board should have a direct line into the motives behind the student government legislation which it must approve,” Klein said. Tempo’s Coining The life and times of coeds who habitate neighborhood beaches is the subject of the featured picture story in the first “Tempo” of the semester, coming out Tuesday. The price is 25 cents. Plata By Bab Nitti Frantic Coed Is Disturbed By Cameraman . . . joyful ‘702’ open house, page 5 |
Archive | mhc_19630222_001.tif |
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