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iS -AM 1 sea filW with? -oops. Ift “is not even Haw; ea battles can ltly sickening J? enterprise§7-the modern specta lat of that? nt drama critic wh ;t do i eare for gho dytemnestra” mi J another saying.«, 3 touch'0Ur should not lust so edly after our Waj. JAZZ JUMpS p«e« 4 “mtsnr it nm I urrican UQMirnn 2 The Mia ^ —— 2 > al Gables, Florida, July 19, 1963 _Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 building Nears Finish Mark Dean Returns; Others Lauded A former member of the university faculty returns in the land two other UM faculty members were honored recently. C. Bryce Dunham, former assistant dean of the College of and Sciences, returns to the campus this fall as associate * % -n of that college, pean Dunham received both -bachelor’s and master’s de--s in education from UM taught for two years at •¡ami Edison Senior High Lool before joining the uni--sity faculty in 1953. For the past three years, since he has been dean of stu-(-ts at Pacific University, For-J Grove, Oregon. Another faculty member, Dr. rray Streitfeld was elected a low of the American Academy 'Microbiology. Streitfeld is as-¡nt professor of microbiology, e was recently named presi-lent of the South Florida ¡apter of the American So-oety of Microbiology. He has ten with the Medical School since 1953 and is a research associate with Variety Foundation and the Veterans Adminis-Iration Hospital. A third member of the faculty, rrold S. L. Lindquist recently bbited his sculpture in the ’»s Bay Country Club, nager of the Photo Center, quist is also an instructor of ‘tography in the department of alism. He studied sculpture design at Ohio University. Allers Set To Star Sunday ®y SHARON O’BRIEN Hurricane News Editor I ® ijcdermaus,” a traditional ,. ar’s Eve operetta, is slated . Sunday’s “Pops” concert Jk TO three-act piece by Johann g*® will be directed by Franz •Allers was the original p lrector of Broadway shows \*yT Lady” and “Camelot.” Ppearing with Allers in the ? w°rk will be Arlene Cam CrS’ Metropolitan Opera soprano, L. D. Clem-New York City Opera E* *enor, and three local p. S s' ®°se Byrum, soprano, #nt> u 6S Maddaford Whitney, E*0’ and Bill Eastman, •«ntone. ,,ls ^ers sixth appearance e Pops.” Last year, he ion * ,SUccess with a concert >w”°p ranZ Lehar’s “Merry ' He set a unique record i cf? New York’s Lew-“Allo conducting d3-C,di.USS’an Program," an oh Program” and “An s win Program,” in three ,f<Cve ni?hts- is Lis appearance here, tht.uS to Honolulu to con-- Hen°lulu Symphony Or- rounds out his sum- Witu 1 i, , Performances in Phila-oefore returning to ■ on? prePare for a Septem-’Diep,n®.°f “My Fair Lady.” diced • e r m a u s” was first is • ienna in 1874-,,,rhe * ’ *s known in English ^Presented at the Metro- sadiS”and °n Broadway North, That Is! ft A new civic center and library will be built to replace the 37-year-old University of Miami tradition — North Campus — which was sold recently. President Henry King Stanford announced that the Coral Gables bid had met the approval of the Board of Trustees. A reconverted hotel with “cardboard walls” partitioning off early classrooms, North Campus marked the site of UM’s first campus. North Campus consists of the triangular Anastasia Building and five other buildings. Technically, the Coral Gables bid is in terms of a 12-month option to purchase with a $15,000 down payment and a $310,000 balance to be paid at the time of closing. In addition to the money, the university will receive two tracts of city land adjacent to the main campus. The extra time insured by the option will give the city time to raise funds for the civic development, and the university will also have time to find housing for the departments now remaining at North Campus. The departments currently at the Anastasia Build-ing include chemistry, zoology, physical education and radio-television-film. The university will get land bordered by San Amaro on t e west, San Amaro Court on the north and C a m p o s a n o on the southeast, plus a block of land across the railroad tracks New Hall. _____ One queen is usually royalty enough for any school, but the University of Miami has two queens on campus. The beauty queens are Ellen Centerbar, lower, lumberjack queen and Jeanne Hefinger, top, former Orange Bowl princess. The coeds, both juniors, are now participating in the Miss Universe Beauty Pageant at the Miami Beach Convention Hall. The beauty festival culminates tomorrow evening in the crowning of Miss Universe. Jeanne is acting as Miss Hospitality. Jeanne is playing hostess to girls from all 48 states as well as to girls from abroad. She is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. As official hostess, Jeanne is not eligible to garner a beauty award. The coed is a local model who has posed for advertisements. Jeanne also graced the pages of “Tempo,” official student magazine. Ellen Centerbar represents her home state, Vermont, in the contest. She has been sweetheart of Sigma Chi fraternity and is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Her picture has also appeared in “Tempo” and she has been Miss Coral Gables, National Bowling Queen and Bennington Foliage Queen. from ■M What What Makes Makes Follower? Leader? Conformity and individualism is the subject of a psychological study now being conducted by Dr. John W. McDavid, chairman of the psychology department. McDavid, an educator-researcher, is spending the summer analyzing the findings of 500 tests using children in the three-year-old to five-year-old age bracket. The main purpose of the ex. By JACK DORMER Hurricane Editorial Assistant A “fish behavior” building now under construction at the Institute of Marine Science on Virginia Key is expected to be completed in September. The new structure, officially designated the Marine Life Controlled Environment Building, is designed for the study of marine animal behavior under a variety of conditions. The first building of its kind to be erected, it will be equipped with the latest apparatus for studying the activities and responses of different kinds of marine life. Within the 14,000 square feet of research area, scientists will be able to duplicate sea conditions or even to create new environments for animals under study, using complex instruments to record reactions. Special pressurized tanks up to 40 feet in length will enable scientists to study the marine life under simulated conditions of varied depths. Machines will regulate the water to achieve the desired temperature, salinity, oxygen, carbon dioxide, acid-base relationship and cloudiness. Filtered rooftop settling tanks will provide up to 600 gallons of water per minute. The location of the building — on Virginia Key — will permit living specimens to be transferred from the bay to the tanks with maximum safety. A special elevator may then transport the animals to the second and third floors of the building. A permanent group of trained scientists under the direction of Dr. Warren J. Wisby will staff the laboratory. Wisby is currently doing research on the hearing ability of sharks. In addition to the permanent staff, visiting scientists including Professor Konrad Lorenz of Vienna, Dr. Gunnar Thorson of Copenhagen and Dr. Ramon Mar-galef of Barcelona will use the facilities for research. Total cost of the building, including its complex and specialized equipment, will be approximately $500,000. The National Science Foundation provided $200,000. periment is to discover the motivations and the pressures that will build an “organization man” or a non-conformist. “ ‘Followship’ is a word used to describe it,” explained McDavid. “What kinds of people imitate others and under just what conditions? Why do they follow,” he asked. The experiment is conducted by means of a game for children. The only catch is that in order to win the child must conform, he said. The child under observation is mi , rwvoretta Bv Johann Strauss asked to play the game with an adult researcher. The test consists of pushing buttons under a panel of brightly-colored, flashing lights. If the right button is pressed at the right time, a marble falls down. With enough marbles, the child wins the game. The marbles are stacked so that the adult always wins, while the child can succeed only by imitating the winner. How quickly the child conforms to the winning pattern is tied up with certain elements in upbringing, McDavid remarked. “If the child almost immediately begins to follow the adult’s example, he may he classed as highly dependent,” he said. “But he may discover a system to beat the adult, and then go his own way.” Following the games, McDavid and his staff interview the parents. Parents of the followers are overprotective, McDavid said, but they consider themselves permissive. “In reality they are sitting like hawks, afraid something will happen,” McDavid said. “Lately Fve termed this smother-love.” The individualist’s parents are harder to classify, McDavid feels. “In general the parents of these individualists belong to the ‘children are people, although little people’ school.” The tests are not capable of predicting if the child will he a blind follower 20 years from now, McDavid pointed out. Test Time Caps Classes Pistachio nuts and watermelon rinds are just two indications that final exams are here. You can eat your pistachios and watermelon before or after any of the final examinations scheduled below. But pistachio nuts and watermelon rinds are prohibited in any of the university’s classrooms. Unless otherwise announced, examinations will take place in the regular classrooms. & BAY CLASSES If Clan Meats At: 8:00 or 8:30 9:30 or 10:00 11:00 or 11:30 12:30 or 1:00 2:00 or 2:30 First period in the evening Second period in the evening Third period in the evening EVENING CLASSES Cartoon by Brenda B. Mann Exam Will Be Given: 8:00- 9:50, Monday, July 22 8:00- 9:50, Tuesday, July 23 10:00-11:50, Monday, July 22 10:00-11:50, Tuesday, July 23 12:30- 2-.20, Monday, July 22 4:30-6:20, Monday, July 22 7:00-8:50, Monday, July 22 7:00-8:50, Tuesday. July 23 Registration for the Second Summer Session is slated for July 25. The first five students to complete registration will receive a fifty pound sack of pistachio nuts.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, July 19, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-07-19 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (4 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_19630719 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630719 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630719_001 |
Full Text |
iS
-AM
1 sea filW with? -oops. Ift “is
not even Haw;
ea battles can
ltly sickening J?
enterprise§7-the modern specta lat of that? nt drama critic wh ;t do i eare for gho
dytemnestra” mi J another saying.«,
3 touch'0Ur should not lust so edly after our Waj.
JAZZ JUMpS p«e« 4
“mtsnr it nm I
urrican
UQMirnn 2
The Mia
^ —— 2 > al Gables, Florida, July 19, 1963 _Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581
building Nears Finish Mark
Dean Returns; Others Lauded
A former member of the university faculty returns in the land two other UM faculty members were honored recently. C. Bryce Dunham, former assistant dean of the College of and Sciences, returns to the campus this fall as associate
* %
-n of that college, pean Dunham received both -bachelor’s and master’s de--s in education from UM taught for two years at •¡ami Edison Senior High Lool before joining the uni--sity faculty in 1953.
For the past three years, since he has been dean of stu-(-ts at Pacific University, For-J Grove, Oregon.
Another faculty member, Dr. rray Streitfeld was elected a low of the American Academy 'Microbiology. Streitfeld is as-¡nt professor of microbiology, e was recently named presi-lent of the South Florida ¡apter of the American So-oety of Microbiology. He has ten with the Medical School since 1953 and is a research associate with Variety Foundation and the Veterans Adminis-Iration Hospital.
A third member of the faculty, rrold S. L. Lindquist recently bbited his sculpture in the ’»s Bay Country Club, nager of the Photo Center, quist is also an instructor of ‘tography in the department of alism. He studied sculpture design at Ohio University.
Allers Set To Star Sunday
®y SHARON O’BRIEN Hurricane News Editor
I ® ijcdermaus,” a traditional ,. ar’s Eve operetta, is slated . Sunday’s “Pops” concert
Jk
TO three-act piece by Johann g*® will be directed by Franz •Allers was the original p lrector of Broadway shows \*yT Lady” and “Camelot.” Ppearing with Allers in the ? w°rk will be Arlene Cam CrS’ Metropolitan Opera soprano, L. D. Clem-New York City Opera E* *enor, and three local p. S s' ®°se Byrum, soprano, #nt> u 6S Maddaford Whitney,
E*0’ and Bill Eastman, •«ntone.
,,ls ^ers sixth appearance e Pops.” Last year, he ion * ,SUccess with a concert >w”°p ranZ Lehar’s “Merry ' He set a unique record i cf? New York’s Lew-“Allo conducting
d3-C,di.USS’an Program," an oh Program” and “An s win Program,” in three
,f |
Archive | mhc_19630719_001.tif |
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