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ra- To The Miami tSÉ Hur ricane » science \v & & IN FLO Volume 9 Coral Gables, Florida, November 22, 1935 Number 9 HURRICANES MEET TARS IN TENTH GRID BATTLE le P¡lo'í¡* • s the ‘Ven. e II ) e. 35 Parade T o Usher In Activities For Football Week This Li alfar« ? i . "le ViM is a which Merchant Organizations Aid; Great Crowd Is Expected For Gala Week %i h Strí% p c°wiing i ^hernselveg n n°wctit, 0nS as the paired," Next Wednesday at 3 p.m., when the combined bands of the Universities of Miami and Florida, together with the representatives of Miami’s high schools, fire and police departments, drum and bugle corps, march en masse with military precision down Flagler Street to Bayfront Park, Football Festival Week will be officially opened and Miami will witness an elegant celebration. Football Festival Week, November 24-30, was ordained by a proclamation of the mayors of Greater Miami. The Wednesday night parade inaugurates the fiesta. Prominent among the succeeding events and topping the grid card is the homecoming game between Miami U. and Boston University, scheduled for Friday night, November 29. So great has been the demand for tickets that special ticket headquarters have been opened to meet the demand. The advance sales for the Miami High-Boys High of Atlanta game, Thanksgiving Day, and the Florida U. - Auburn clash, Saturday afternoon, have also met with marked success. [ Much praise and credit is due to the merchant organizations of Miami who have displayed real spirit in offering to decorate the town with flags and signs of welcome. An outstanding feature of the “March on Bayfront Park” will be the beautifully decorated floats representing the fraternities and sororities of the University of Miami. At the conclusion of the Friday night game there will be held, at the Miami Biltmore hotel, the Alumni Association Dance which may prove to be the outstanding social event of the year. Public Safety Head Urges Securing of Drivers' Licenses Miami Victory Over Wake Forest Told in Action Photos Strong Rollins Eleven Invades Miami Stadium Tubbsmen Seek To Avenge ’34 Loss; Miller Is Orlando Team’s Main Threat The Miami Hurricanes, riddled with injuries, will meet a strong Rollins eleven on the Miami Stadium gridiron at 8 p.m. tonight. The Orange, Green and White gridders have, been hampered by injuries and bruises in their preparation for this important “Little Four” struggle. Glogowski, Rose and Pank-er received injuries in the Wake Forest victory and it is doubtful whether they will be in condition to play tonight. ’ The Tars will present as its star back, George Q. Miller, who personally escorted Rollins to a 14-0 victory last year over the Miamians, when he dashed to two touchdowns on long runs. There should be a merry 'battle between the two forward walls as they are equal as. to weight, and have both withstood enemy rushes to keep scores low. No team has been able to tally more than two touchdowns on the Hurricanes and .the largest margin over the Tars has been 13 points., The probable line-up of the Hurricanes for tonight’s tilt finds Mas-terson and Kalix at the wing posts; Dicker and Wolcuff will hold down the tackles; the guards will be Gaiero and Shinn. The pivot position will be handled by Leonard. The backfield will be composed of Ott, Baker, Petrowski and Boney. The largest crowd of the season is expected and the authorities urge the students to arrive early. Approximately 150 Rollins students are expected to attend tonights’ game, according to a report received by the student athletic, manager, Stuart H. Patton, yesterday. They will occupy seats on the South side of the stadium. Hendrick Elected As Business Manager of The Hurricanes would not be denied the victory in their 3-0 struggle with the Wake Forest gridders. These action pictures show the fight and power of the Miami players. Pete Petrowski (No. 35), is shown knocking the pass out of the hands of Morris (No. 44), Wake Forest halfback. Upper right: Warren (No. 39) of Wake Forest is shown as three Hurricanes toss him for a loss. Below: Joe Panker (No. 27, although only the 2 shows here), is shown clipping off a neat gain, before two Deacon tacklers pull him down. Extreme left is Captain Leonard (No. 38) of the Hurricanes. MALONE ADDRESSES STUDENTS AT INSTITUTE OF JOURNALISM November 30th Set As Final Date; Inspections Made At Police Station Time for securing drivers’ licenses in Coral Gables will not be extended beyond November 30, D. E. Sox, director of public safety, announced yesterday, pointing out that only two weeks remain and that failure to comply with municipal regulations will inevitably result in arrests. “We appreciate the response of both year-round residents and winter visitors to the new ordinance requiring automobile drivers to be licensed, and we are trying to make the examinations as convenient as possible to everybody,” Chief Sox said. “However, the dead-line is the last day of this month and no exceptions will be made thereafter.” Inspections are being made at headquarters station, Alcazar avenue and Salzedo street, from 8 a.m. to 5 P-m. on week days and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays by a picked squad from the police and fire departments. Approximately 1,800 persons have been licensed to date, at a nominal charge of 50 cents for the license and 25 cents for inspection. Visitors to Coral Gables who intend to remain more than 30 days are required to have their automobiles inspected and to secure cards; but those who have been licensed in other states will be given cards free, if the previous examinations comply with the local ordinance. City officials insist on strict compliance, not only with regulations governing licenses, but with all existing traffic rules, ignorance oi which will not excuse violations, Chief Sox said. • Women’s athletic council * The Women’s Athletic Council will bold its regular weekly meeting at 12:30 noon, Monday, in the Social Hall. It is important that all sorority representatives be present at this' meeting if any further sorority intermural events are to be held. University Debaters Meet Emory Squad at Bayfront Park Today Debate To Be First of Year; Vetter and Dorn Present Miami Side This afternoon at 3:30 the University of Miami will hold its first non-decision debate with Emory University at the Bayfront Park in Miami. The question to be debated is, “Resolved: That Congress by a two-thirds vote, should be permitted to over-ride any decision of the Supreme Court of the United States declaring any law unconstitutional.” Harry Vetter and Mary Louise Dorn will represent the U. of M., defending the affirmative side of the question. The question being debated this afternoon is the official Pi Kappa Delta question and is being debated throuhgout the country by colleges and universities. Dr. Julian Zamora Compiling Data For Political Work Dr. Julian C. Zamora, professor of Political Science and Spanish, is doing research work on “A Materialist’s Interpretation of Politics” which he hopes to complete within the next year. Before coming to the University of Miami, Dr. Zamora had taught at the University of Havana for a number of years. His college work includes two years at the University of Havana, two years at Harvard University, and one year post-graduate work at the University of Paris in France. All of the money taken in at this year’s game between Maryland and Western Maryland, at Baltimore, December 7, will go into a fund to build a new field house at Western Maryland. The campaigners expect to raise $100,000 that day. John P. McKnight Will Speak On Associated Press at Next Gathering The Student Institute of Journalism had as its speaker for this week, Mr. Frank Malone, city editor of the Miami Daily News. Mr. Malone’s address was short, the greater part of the period being taken up with his answering questions asked by the members. Mr. Malone agreed, emphatically, with this paper, that the real purpose of the newspaper should be to serve the public good, to expend every effort to divert public opinion into intelligent channels. He differed with the opinion of a former speaker at the Institute as to the purpose of the editorial. This former speaker said that the modern school of editorial writing was to echo the opinion of its readers. Mr. Malone believes that the editorial should be used as a means of putting the facts before the reader’s mind and of making the reader think, if necessary, even to mould the reader’s Y.M.C.A. Hears Thompson In Weekly Bible Lectures Mr. Harry Thompson, one of the outstanding Bible teachers, is conducting a series of lectures on “The Past and Coming Prophecies of the Gentile Age,” at the weekly Y.M.C.A. gatherings. These half-hour meetings are held every Tuesday at 12:30 in the Social Hall. All University students and faculty members are invited to attend. opinion. The Institute has procured John P. McKnight, well known Associated Press correspondent to Cuba, as their speaker at the next gathering of the body on Wednesday, Nov. 27th, at 12:50 in room 202. His subject will be, “How the Associated Press Works.” EDITOR’S NOTE: This article written especially for THE READER’S DIGEST, is reprinted by permission of the publishers. The following is the third installment of the essay. By J. C. Furnas On that same curve a month later, a light touring car crashed a tree. In the middle of the front seat they found a nine-months-old baby surrounded by broken glass and yet absolutely unhurt. A fine practical joke on death—but spoiled by the baby’s parents, still sitting on each side of him, instantly killed by shattering their skulls on the dashboard. If you customarily pass without clear vision a long way ahead, make sure that every member of the party carries indentification papers — it’s difficult to identify a body with its whole face bashed in or torn off. The driver is death’s favorite target. If the steering wheel holds together it ruptures his liver or spleen so he bleeds to death internally. Or, if the steering wheel breaks off, the matter is settled instantly by the steering column’s plunging through his abdomen. By no means do all head-on collisions occur on curves. The modern DELTA TAU SPONSORS ANNUAL OPEN DANCE Following upon the open dance given the University by the Lambda Phi sorority, another open dance will be held by the Delta Tau sorority on Saturday evening at the Coco Plum Woman’s Club. The entire student body is invited, and the success of the dance will depend upon the large crowd that is expected to attend. Bob Reinert and- his Miamelodians will supply the tantalizing rhythms for the dancers. This annual dance ushers in the Miami Festival Week, and will be followed by a series of fraternity dances that will be open to the entire student body. death-trap is likely to be a straight stretch with three lanes of traffic— like the notorious Astor Flats on the Albany Post Road where there have been as many as 27 fatalities in one summer month. This sudden vision of broad, straight road tempts many an ordinarily sensible driver into passing the man ahead. Simultaneously a driver coming the other way swings out at high speed. At the last moment each tries to get into line again, but the gaps are closed. As the cars in line are forced into the ditch to capsize or crash fences, the passers meet, almost head on, in a swirling, grinding smash that sends them caroming obliquely into the others. A trooper described such an accident—five cars in one mess, seven killed on the spot, two dead on the way to the hospital, two more dead in the long run. He remembered it far more vividly than he wanted to —the quick way the doctor turned away from a dead man to check up on a woman with a broken back; the three bodies out of one car so soaked with oil from the crankcase that they looked like wet brown cigars and not human at all; a man, walking around Annual Publication Receives Easy Majority Vote In Senate; Staff To Be Selected Soon The publication of the Ibis for 1936 is officially under way today with the election of Dave Hendrick as business manager of the annual publication. Hendrick was chosen -by a majority vote of the Student Senafe sitting at a special meeting on Wednesday. The new business manager is a law student and member of the Pi Chi fraternity. He is also president of the Debating Society. It is expected that Hendrick..-will choose his staff within the next week. and babbling to himself,, oblivious of the dead and dying, even obliviouá of the daggar-like sliver of steel that stuck out of his streaming wrist;; a pretty girl with her forehead laid wide open, trying hopelessly to crawl out of a ditch in spite of her smashed hip. A first-class massacreof , that sort is only a question of scale and numbers—seven corpses are no deader than one. Each shattered man, woman or child who went to make up the 36,000 corpses chalked; up last year had to die a personal jieath... A car careening and rolling down a bank, battering and ¿mashing its occupants every inch of the way, can wrap itself so thoroughly around' a tree that front and rear bumpers jn-terlock, requiring an acetylene torch to cut them apart. Ifi a recent‘Casé of that sort they found the old lady, who had been sitting in back, lying across the lap of her daughter, ■ who was in front, each soaked in her own and the other’s blood indistinguish-ably, each so shattered and broken that there was no point whatever in an autopsy to determine whether it was broken neck or ruptured heart that caused death. (To be continued next week) '' ‘ ‘— and Sudden Death ’: / (Continued on Page 3) ) to attend. 1 tion give it formal recognition. ■'V.V4V ¿t ina 111 Pa liticai and economic affairs I---* - --- - ■ -‘jmmt ' mediately following =r~~■
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 22, 1935 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1935-11-22 |
Coverage Temporal | 1930-1939 |
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_19351122 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19351122 |
Digital ID | mhc_19351122_001 |
Full Text | ra- To The Miami tSÉ Hur ricane » science \v & & IN FLO Volume 9 Coral Gables, Florida, November 22, 1935 Number 9 HURRICANES MEET TARS IN TENTH GRID BATTLE le P¡lo'í¡* • s the ‘Ven. e II ) e. 35 Parade T o Usher In Activities For Football Week This Li alfar« ? i . "le ViM is a which Merchant Organizations Aid; Great Crowd Is Expected For Gala Week %i h Strí% p c°wiing i ^hernselveg n n°wctit, 0nS as the paired," Next Wednesday at 3 p.m., when the combined bands of the Universities of Miami and Florida, together with the representatives of Miami’s high schools, fire and police departments, drum and bugle corps, march en masse with military precision down Flagler Street to Bayfront Park, Football Festival Week will be officially opened and Miami will witness an elegant celebration. Football Festival Week, November 24-30, was ordained by a proclamation of the mayors of Greater Miami. The Wednesday night parade inaugurates the fiesta. Prominent among the succeeding events and topping the grid card is the homecoming game between Miami U. and Boston University, scheduled for Friday night, November 29. So great has been the demand for tickets that special ticket headquarters have been opened to meet the demand. The advance sales for the Miami High-Boys High of Atlanta game, Thanksgiving Day, and the Florida U. - Auburn clash, Saturday afternoon, have also met with marked success. [ Much praise and credit is due to the merchant organizations of Miami who have displayed real spirit in offering to decorate the town with flags and signs of welcome. An outstanding feature of the “March on Bayfront Park” will be the beautifully decorated floats representing the fraternities and sororities of the University of Miami. At the conclusion of the Friday night game there will be held, at the Miami Biltmore hotel, the Alumni Association Dance which may prove to be the outstanding social event of the year. Public Safety Head Urges Securing of Drivers' Licenses Miami Victory Over Wake Forest Told in Action Photos Strong Rollins Eleven Invades Miami Stadium Tubbsmen Seek To Avenge ’34 Loss; Miller Is Orlando Team’s Main Threat The Miami Hurricanes, riddled with injuries, will meet a strong Rollins eleven on the Miami Stadium gridiron at 8 p.m. tonight. The Orange, Green and White gridders have, been hampered by injuries and bruises in their preparation for this important “Little Four” struggle. Glogowski, Rose and Pank-er received injuries in the Wake Forest victory and it is doubtful whether they will be in condition to play tonight. ’ The Tars will present as its star back, George Q. Miller, who personally escorted Rollins to a 14-0 victory last year over the Miamians, when he dashed to two touchdowns on long runs. There should be a merry 'battle between the two forward walls as they are equal as. to weight, and have both withstood enemy rushes to keep scores low. No team has been able to tally more than two touchdowns on the Hurricanes and .the largest margin over the Tars has been 13 points., The probable line-up of the Hurricanes for tonight’s tilt finds Mas-terson and Kalix at the wing posts; Dicker and Wolcuff will hold down the tackles; the guards will be Gaiero and Shinn. The pivot position will be handled by Leonard. The backfield will be composed of Ott, Baker, Petrowski and Boney. The largest crowd of the season is expected and the authorities urge the students to arrive early. Approximately 150 Rollins students are expected to attend tonights’ game, according to a report received by the student athletic, manager, Stuart H. Patton, yesterday. They will occupy seats on the South side of the stadium. Hendrick Elected As Business Manager of The Hurricanes would not be denied the victory in their 3-0 struggle with the Wake Forest gridders. These action pictures show the fight and power of the Miami players. Pete Petrowski (No. 35), is shown knocking the pass out of the hands of Morris (No. 44), Wake Forest halfback. Upper right: Warren (No. 39) of Wake Forest is shown as three Hurricanes toss him for a loss. Below: Joe Panker (No. 27, although only the 2 shows here), is shown clipping off a neat gain, before two Deacon tacklers pull him down. Extreme left is Captain Leonard (No. 38) of the Hurricanes. MALONE ADDRESSES STUDENTS AT INSTITUTE OF JOURNALISM November 30th Set As Final Date; Inspections Made At Police Station Time for securing drivers’ licenses in Coral Gables will not be extended beyond November 30, D. E. Sox, director of public safety, announced yesterday, pointing out that only two weeks remain and that failure to comply with municipal regulations will inevitably result in arrests. “We appreciate the response of both year-round residents and winter visitors to the new ordinance requiring automobile drivers to be licensed, and we are trying to make the examinations as convenient as possible to everybody,” Chief Sox said. “However, the dead-line is the last day of this month and no exceptions will be made thereafter.” Inspections are being made at headquarters station, Alcazar avenue and Salzedo street, from 8 a.m. to 5 P-m. on week days and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays by a picked squad from the police and fire departments. Approximately 1,800 persons have been licensed to date, at a nominal charge of 50 cents for the license and 25 cents for inspection. Visitors to Coral Gables who intend to remain more than 30 days are required to have their automobiles inspected and to secure cards; but those who have been licensed in other states will be given cards free, if the previous examinations comply with the local ordinance. City officials insist on strict compliance, not only with regulations governing licenses, but with all existing traffic rules, ignorance oi which will not excuse violations, Chief Sox said. • Women’s athletic council * The Women’s Athletic Council will bold its regular weekly meeting at 12:30 noon, Monday, in the Social Hall. It is important that all sorority representatives be present at this' meeting if any further sorority intermural events are to be held. University Debaters Meet Emory Squad at Bayfront Park Today Debate To Be First of Year; Vetter and Dorn Present Miami Side This afternoon at 3:30 the University of Miami will hold its first non-decision debate with Emory University at the Bayfront Park in Miami. The question to be debated is, “Resolved: That Congress by a two-thirds vote, should be permitted to over-ride any decision of the Supreme Court of the United States declaring any law unconstitutional.” Harry Vetter and Mary Louise Dorn will represent the U. of M., defending the affirmative side of the question. The question being debated this afternoon is the official Pi Kappa Delta question and is being debated throuhgout the country by colleges and universities. Dr. Julian Zamora Compiling Data For Political Work Dr. Julian C. Zamora, professor of Political Science and Spanish, is doing research work on “A Materialist’s Interpretation of Politics” which he hopes to complete within the next year. Before coming to the University of Miami, Dr. Zamora had taught at the University of Havana for a number of years. His college work includes two years at the University of Havana, two years at Harvard University, and one year post-graduate work at the University of Paris in France. All of the money taken in at this year’s game between Maryland and Western Maryland, at Baltimore, December 7, will go into a fund to build a new field house at Western Maryland. The campaigners expect to raise $100,000 that day. John P. McKnight Will Speak On Associated Press at Next Gathering The Student Institute of Journalism had as its speaker for this week, Mr. Frank Malone, city editor of the Miami Daily News. Mr. Malone’s address was short, the greater part of the period being taken up with his answering questions asked by the members. Mr. Malone agreed, emphatically, with this paper, that the real purpose of the newspaper should be to serve the public good, to expend every effort to divert public opinion into intelligent channels. He differed with the opinion of a former speaker at the Institute as to the purpose of the editorial. This former speaker said that the modern school of editorial writing was to echo the opinion of its readers. Mr. Malone believes that the editorial should be used as a means of putting the facts before the reader’s mind and of making the reader think, if necessary, even to mould the reader’s Y.M.C.A. Hears Thompson In Weekly Bible Lectures Mr. Harry Thompson, one of the outstanding Bible teachers, is conducting a series of lectures on “The Past and Coming Prophecies of the Gentile Age,” at the weekly Y.M.C.A. gatherings. These half-hour meetings are held every Tuesday at 12:30 in the Social Hall. All University students and faculty members are invited to attend. opinion. The Institute has procured John P. McKnight, well known Associated Press correspondent to Cuba, as their speaker at the next gathering of the body on Wednesday, Nov. 27th, at 12:50 in room 202. His subject will be, “How the Associated Press Works.” EDITOR’S NOTE: This article written especially for THE READER’S DIGEST, is reprinted by permission of the publishers. The following is the third installment of the essay. By J. C. Furnas On that same curve a month later, a light touring car crashed a tree. In the middle of the front seat they found a nine-months-old baby surrounded by broken glass and yet absolutely unhurt. A fine practical joke on death—but spoiled by the baby’s parents, still sitting on each side of him, instantly killed by shattering their skulls on the dashboard. If you customarily pass without clear vision a long way ahead, make sure that every member of the party carries indentification papers — it’s difficult to identify a body with its whole face bashed in or torn off. The driver is death’s favorite target. If the steering wheel holds together it ruptures his liver or spleen so he bleeds to death internally. Or, if the steering wheel breaks off, the matter is settled instantly by the steering column’s plunging through his abdomen. By no means do all head-on collisions occur on curves. The modern DELTA TAU SPONSORS ANNUAL OPEN DANCE Following upon the open dance given the University by the Lambda Phi sorority, another open dance will be held by the Delta Tau sorority on Saturday evening at the Coco Plum Woman’s Club. The entire student body is invited, and the success of the dance will depend upon the large crowd that is expected to attend. Bob Reinert and- his Miamelodians will supply the tantalizing rhythms for the dancers. This annual dance ushers in the Miami Festival Week, and will be followed by a series of fraternity dances that will be open to the entire student body. death-trap is likely to be a straight stretch with three lanes of traffic— like the notorious Astor Flats on the Albany Post Road where there have been as many as 27 fatalities in one summer month. This sudden vision of broad, straight road tempts many an ordinarily sensible driver into passing the man ahead. Simultaneously a driver coming the other way swings out at high speed. At the last moment each tries to get into line again, but the gaps are closed. As the cars in line are forced into the ditch to capsize or crash fences, the passers meet, almost head on, in a swirling, grinding smash that sends them caroming obliquely into the others. A trooper described such an accident—five cars in one mess, seven killed on the spot, two dead on the way to the hospital, two more dead in the long run. He remembered it far more vividly than he wanted to —the quick way the doctor turned away from a dead man to check up on a woman with a broken back; the three bodies out of one car so soaked with oil from the crankcase that they looked like wet brown cigars and not human at all; a man, walking around Annual Publication Receives Easy Majority Vote In Senate; Staff To Be Selected Soon The publication of the Ibis for 1936 is officially under way today with the election of Dave Hendrick as business manager of the annual publication. Hendrick was chosen -by a majority vote of the Student Senafe sitting at a special meeting on Wednesday. The new business manager is a law student and member of the Pi Chi fraternity. He is also president of the Debating Society. It is expected that Hendrick..-will choose his staff within the next week. and babbling to himself,, oblivious of the dead and dying, even obliviouá of the daggar-like sliver of steel that stuck out of his streaming wrist;; a pretty girl with her forehead laid wide open, trying hopelessly to crawl out of a ditch in spite of her smashed hip. A first-class massacreof , that sort is only a question of scale and numbers—seven corpses are no deader than one. Each shattered man, woman or child who went to make up the 36,000 corpses chalked; up last year had to die a personal jieath... A car careening and rolling down a bank, battering and ¿mashing its occupants every inch of the way, can wrap itself so thoroughly around' a tree that front and rear bumpers jn-terlock, requiring an acetylene torch to cut them apart. Ifi a recent‘Casé of that sort they found the old lady, who had been sitting in back, lying across the lap of her daughter, ■ who was in front, each soaked in her own and the other’s blood indistinguish-ably, each so shattered and broken that there was no point whatever in an autopsy to determine whether it was broken neck or ruptured heart that caused death. (To be continued next week) '' ‘ ‘— and Sudden Death ’: / (Continued on Page 3) ) to attend. 1 tion give it formal recognition. ■'V.V4V ¿t ina 111 Pa liticai and economic affairs I---* - --- - ■ -‘jmmt ' mediately following =r~~■ |
Archive | mhc_19351122_001.tif |
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