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Celti. íes 2 i a&d^ ' sWekl¿ Convins tackle jj at, but i, alts are he big {, Univera «eh tus •ave Fed, graduated es short unding de. ‘inde 1» $ an1" 1 bean icanes. game is ( Beach C® St. Pet, Jersey. J i with tbs 52 te in Kena* with sen ay, W. ake up The Hiri i this tilt (ID) G* tistics *t (1) de Pit, Pts. .460 18 .46) 1® .495 1Ï .516 11! .40? Ill .422 S .444 8 .422 8 .636 li .1000 ! Bill B*a 12, and lins was y while O )evil sc® was not® a ture rasons. Louisville Tests Limping Games By JERRY Q. GREENFIELD „ ^ pfD O inco CntÜÜ?"?ws Edu“r • , t° e8*ate Conference and received a bid to the National by 8:15 p.m. when the same starts. “The Auditoripm hurricane Assistant News Editor The big question this Saturday night is whether history rn repeat itself when the Hurricanes meet Louisville in the Miami Beach Auditorium. Some students can still remember a night two years ago when Miami faced the highly ranked Cardinals after a disastrous road trip. Miami stayed close to the cards several times but never gained the lead until Bruce Applegate’s short jump-shot with two seconds remaining won the game 71-69. The Canes went on that year to capture the Florida Inter- collegiate Conference and received a bid to the National Invitational Tournament in New York. Now the Cardinals are back — with a vengeance. If the Canes can win this game, they have a good chance of going to the NIT. If there was ever a team praying for history to repeat itself, this is it. But one injury could well make the difference. Rick Barry has been averaging 19 points a game this season, but we almost lost to Jacksonville this week when he was out with an injured foot. With this much at stake, the house should be packed by 8:15 p.m. when the holds 34,000 — standing \ there,” said Art Laskey, ii Of the 1200 passes for — and I expect, them all tc I charge rk tickefe. students ~ar MiaiHiV last three home games, there are only 300 left for Saturday’s match. All students who did not pick up their passes, may do so at “Chink” Whitten’s office as long as the supply lasts. If students who do not have tickets can get to Miami Beach Auditorium by 6:45 p.m. tomorrow night, Lasky will try to get them in on their student cards. All students with passes should be there by 8 p.m. Page 9 The Mia urricane Does Rush Fail? Page 13 38th Year, No. 14 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, February 8, 1963 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 Stanford Nixes Political Parties Political parties were denied a campus comeback by President Henry K. Stanford. He backed up the Board of Review’s decision to prohibit political on campus. He «j gjjmk the decision is wrong,” said he needed more time to ob- ^ M Cohan> Honor Council serve the po i ca si . chairman. “The need for strong before giving politics the nod “I do not like some of the reports on past campus and off campus events which controlled the political situation. They certainly did not benefit the student government,” remarked President Stanford. Party politics was officially banned from campus in 1958 when an investigation of spring elections revealed ballot-box manipulation. Last November, Undergraduate Student Government passed a resolution to remove the clause in their constitution prohibiting parties. Early in December the Board of Review rejected the measure. fw'10 ^ “President Stanford was com-m that n? pletely justified in his decision He grab to wait and see the results of coming elections,” said Stuart Bloch, USG president. “I think he will give it the necessary study to make a judgment in the future. We '•aniled the situation badly, •Ben passed the measure too bte,” declared Bloch. political interest and the development of student government can best be met through an active party system. Model Shown Union Plans Near Finish Line By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor Ground-breaking ceremonies for construction of the new multi-million-dollar Student Union are slated for late April, according to President Henry K. Stanford. Final plans — with changes thought up by students — are currently being drawn up by architect Robert M. Little. Ar- rival date for the blueprints is April 1 and bids go out shortly after that. A new scale model of the Union will be on exhibit in the Ashe Building starting Monday. The model sports the corrections that are being drawn into the blueprints. Major changes in the plans eHum® The on]y saiution Bloch tonmends is repassing the ijcendment as early as possible. JMs will give President Stan-"rd the required time to study legislation. lj| Opinions of other student lead-contrasted with Bloch’s. Ike Klein, USG vice presi-termed the decision “an un-rve<l affront to the student m Photo By Ptul Barton, KAM WORRIED MEN watch as the Hurricanes battle for their lives against Jacksonville. The young man covering his ears is star sophomore Rick Barry, sidelined with an injured foot for more than a week, is the main reason the Canes had su<ffia scuffle before downing their upstate nvaL And if his foot t better by tomorrow night’s game against Louisville, well isn have a worried team. IFC Stalls Debate On Late Rush A move to junk deferred rush and allow all men to go Greek was tabled yesterday at the Inter-Fraternity Council meeting. Decision on Mike Klein’s suggestion that a smoker be held letting all men rush regardless of class or grade average was postponed. Deferred rush came under fire recently by Greek leaders who blamed fraternity troubles on the system. Klein, president of Sigma Nu, said that many men who show promise and desire for fraternity life don’t make good grades. “The cost to fraternities on campus in terms of manpower and money is so great as to require that this proposal be accepted immediately,” declared Klein. “A decision as to the value of deferred rush has been put off by IFC because this semester was supposed to be a test of its value. “It has not proved valuable and should be thrown out,” Klein What Ever Happened to Bob Johns? I stormy man with the , er-runmed glasses, who for yefrs ran the internal af-C? 0 University of Mi-rincnv stops by only to pick l p mail. tii' >*** Johns, execu-1, iJ?e„president fr°in Aug. ¡s ’ though last summer, I’M °nSer employed by Th loW-r!j Was never a notice of Hlfe eaving released by the did th- formation Office, nor a m fres‘dent’s office give Thenfement on why he left «r.tj ^ ,Was a reorganization ^ ’den?°b executive vice Idem eliminated,” said Henry K. Stanford *eek. “Dr. ^ith us ” foil, Johns is no ^tog Johns’ arrival - DR. ROBERT JOHNS ... at liberty campus, several orders were passed through his office which rallied student reaction against him. Included in the more disliked measures passed were the shutting dorm telephones at 11 p.m., the raising of girls’ curfew on weekends to 1 pm., the “drying up” of fraternity houses and the removal of candy machines from the Memorial classroom area. “Many of the things which passed through my office I had nothing to do with,” said Johns. “But there were things I did and I feel they were for the betterment of the school . . • and I would do them again.” Since Dr. Johns departed — about the same time Dr. Stanford arrived — none of the above mentioned measures have been changed. “I was brought to this uni- versity by the executive committee of the Board of Trustees,” said Johns, “and I feel it was against the wishes of some of the members of the administration.” Throughout his stay at Miami, there was friction with the administration, according to Johns. At present, Johns and his family still maintain their home in Coral Gables. He is doing some work in education for the government and also has business pending in Illinois. But as for future plans? “I’m kinda enjoying myself, right now,” said Johns. “And I have no definite plans for leaving. I like it here.” were made on the second floor. Space was taken from the bookstore — about 1,300 square feet — and turned over to student activities. Four meeting rooms, a canopy from the Ring Theatre to the Union parking area, bleachers near the pool area and more space for student publications are some of the innovations now being inked cm the plans. These changes grew out of a series of meetings between administrators and student leaders. At the meetings were President Stanford; Dr. Eugene Cohen, vice president and treasurer; Stuart Bloch, Undergraduate Student Government president; Mike Klein, USG vice president; Peter Klugman, Men’s Residence Hall Association president; Diane Nelson, Associated Women Student’s president; Ann Lambert, Pan-hellenic president and Tom Ci-resa, Inter-Fraternity Council president. Money for building the Union comes from a million - dollar loan from the Housing and Home Finance Agency. Estimated cost of the building is about two-million-dollars. Save $3? A proposal to cut parking fines to $3 and put violations into student hands is awaiting the signature of President Henry K. Stanford. The traffic committee composed of Noble Hendrix, dean of students; Matthew Borek, physical plant head; Stuart Bloch, Undergraduate Student Government president and Mike Klein, USG vice president, drafted the letter. Under the new system all violations would come under direct USG control in cooperation with the dean of student’s office. All violators would shell out $3 for the first and second offences. Three-time losers would be referred to the dean of student’s office. Long Distance Rides ’• Going, Going, Gone A three year cat-and-mouse chase with UM students making illegal long distance phone calls is about to be ended by a "fool-proof” system, a Bell Telephone official said this week. --------------——----- “We’ve been having trouble with those phones in the dorms ever since that reverting toll system was put in three years ago,” said Cid Evins, head of the university account at Bell. The reverting system is supposed to bounce all calls back to the school switch board when a student tries to reach an outside operator. “It’s a mechanical failure,” said Evins. “Some of the calls get through to the outside operator and a kid can make a call to anywhere using any number.” Over $3200 in illegal long distance calls were made from the university during May and June of 1962. “But that’s all over now,” he said. “This new checking system coming in April will fix it. It’s fool-proof.” Actually, few students really got away with not paying for their calls, said UM head operator Sylvia Knowll. “We know where every call comes from,” she said. “It may take us a month or so to catch up, but we get our money.” Mrs. Knowll said that most students don’t really mean any harm, and they just make the calls by accident She did recall a pair two years ago who made a habit of the “free” service—and got expelled. “Just one thing,” said the head operator. “That reverting system was supposed to be foolproof.”
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, February 8, 1963 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1963-02-08 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (24 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_19630208 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19630208 |
Digital ID | mhc_19630208_001 |
Full Text |
Celti.
íes 2 i a&d^
' sWekl¿
Convins
tackle jj at, but i, alts are
he big {, Univera «eh tus
•ave Fed, graduated es short unding de. ‘inde 1» $ an1"
1 bean icanes. game is ( Beach C® St. Pet, Jersey. J i with tbs 52 te in Kena* with sen ay, W. ake up The Hiri i this tilt
(ID) G* tistics *t (1) de Pit, Pts.
.460 18 .46) 1® .495 1Ï .516 11! .40? Ill .422 S .444 8 .422 8 .636 li .1000 !
Bill B*a 12, and
lins was y while O )evil sc® was not® a
ture
rasons.
Louisville Tests Limping Games
By JERRY Q. GREENFIELD „ ^ pfD O inco
CntÜÜ?"?ws Edu“r • , t° e8*ate Conference and received a bid to the National by 8:15 p.m. when the same starts. “The Auditoripm
hurricane Assistant News Editor
The big question this Saturday night is whether history rn repeat itself when the Hurricanes meet Louisville in the Miami Beach Auditorium.
Some students can still remember a night two years ago when Miami faced the highly ranked Cardinals after a
disastrous road trip.
Miami stayed close to the cards several times but never gained the lead until Bruce Applegate’s short jump-shot with two seconds remaining won the game 71-69.
The Canes went on that year to capture the Florida Inter-
collegiate Conference and received a bid to the National Invitational Tournament in New York.
Now the Cardinals are back — with a vengeance.
If the Canes can win this game, they have a good chance of going to the NIT. If there was ever a team praying for history to repeat itself, this is it.
But one injury could well make the difference. Rick Barry has been averaging 19 points a game this season, but we almost lost to Jacksonville this week when he was out with an injured foot.
With this much at stake, the house should be packed
by 8:15 p.m. when the holds 34,000 — standing \
there,” said Art Laskey, ii
Of the 1200 passes for
— and I expect, them all tc I charge rk tickefe.
students
~ar MiaiHiV last three
home games, there are only 300 left for Saturday’s match. All students who did not pick up their passes, may do so at “Chink” Whitten’s office as long as the supply lasts.
If students who do not have tickets can get to Miami Beach Auditorium by 6:45 p.m. tomorrow night, Lasky will try to get them in on their student cards. All students with passes should be there by 8 p.m.
Page 9
The Mia
urricane
Does
Rush
Fail?
Page 13
38th
Year, No. 14
University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, February 8, 1963
Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581
Stanford Nixes Political Parties
Political parties were denied a campus comeback by President Henry K. Stanford.
He backed up the Board of Review’s decision to prohibit
political on campus. He «j gjjmk the decision is wrong,”
said he needed more time to ob- ^ M Cohan> Honor Council
serve the po i ca si . chairman. “The need for strong
before giving politics the nod “I do not like some of the reports on past campus and off campus events which controlled the political situation. They certainly did not benefit the student government,” remarked President Stanford.
Party politics was officially banned from campus in 1958 when an investigation of spring elections revealed ballot-box manipulation.
Last November, Undergraduate Student Government passed a resolution to remove the clause in their constitution prohibiting parties. Early in December the Board of Review rejected the measure.
fw'10 ^ “President Stanford was com-m that n? pletely justified in his decision He grab to wait and see the results of coming elections,” said Stuart Bloch, USG president.
“I think he will give it the necessary study to make a judgment in the future. We '•aniled the situation badly, •Ben passed the measure too bte,” declared Bloch.
political interest and the development of student government can best be met through an active party system.
Model Shown
Union Plans Near Finish Line
By ELAYNE GILBERT Hurricane News Editor
Ground-breaking ceremonies for construction of the new multi-million-dollar Student Union are slated for late April, according to President Henry K. Stanford.
Final plans — with changes thought up by students — are currently being drawn up by architect Robert M. Little. Ar-
rival date for the blueprints is April 1 and bids go out shortly after that.
A new scale model of the Union will be on exhibit in the Ashe Building starting Monday. The model sports the corrections that are being drawn into the blueprints.
Major changes in the plans
eHum® The on]y saiution Bloch
tonmends is repassing the ijcendment as early as possible. JMs will give President Stan-"rd the required time to study legislation.
lj| Opinions of other student lead-contrasted with Bloch’s.
Ike Klein, USG vice presi-termed the decision “an un-rve |
Archive | mhc_19630208_001.tif |
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