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THE MIAMI HURRICANE THE OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI VoL. 8. CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA, OCTOBER 20, 1933 NO. 3 POLLS OPEN TODAY FROM 8:30 To 3:30 BOOTH ANNOUNCES DEFINITE STUDENT AFFAIRS PROGRAM Assembly Once A Month Will Have Well Planned Entertainment FORUM PROPOSED Senate Convenes November 2 For First Time This Year Y. M. C. A. And Y. W. C. A. To Meet Meetings of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. have been scheduled for next Thursday, October 26. A special invitation has been extended by Lois Taylor, leader of the womens organization, to all new girls. Emerson Fahrney will be in charge of the men’s group. All University men are invited. A definite program for student affairs has been planned by Aileen Booth, president of the student body, which will go into effect November 2. Under this schedule the | —--------------------- first Thursday in every month will ! pT pTJT tlOTTQTT be devoted to senate meeting, the XTX X^XXX XX U second Thursday to Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. meetings, the third Thursday to class meetings and the fourth Thursday to general assembly. A well planned program will feature every assembly which will include plays, noted speakers, student forum and miscellaneous entertainment. The student forum is a new departure and is expected to be popular. This will- give all students ample opportunity to state DR. BELAUNDE, SR. NOW IN MEXICO Use Of Student Activities Books Ticket-takers at the University games have been instructed not to honor sudent activities books unless the name of the student appears on the front cover of each book and each admission ticket is signed by the student to whom this book is issued. The books are not transferable, and will not be replaced if lost. Tickets are void if detached. VICE PRESIDENT TWO SENATORS TO BE ELECTED Caesarano And Sloan Are Only Candidates For Vice President VOTE IN ROOM 201 OPEN TONIGHT AFTER GAME Entire Student Body Invited To Attend Open House On Coral Way Noted Statesman, Teacher Is Ambassador To Nation South Of Us MYSTERY TEAM OPENS AGAINST Abras, Shaw, Turner, Varner Running For Justice Vacancies The election booth will be open from 8:30 until 3:30 today, to fill the vacancies in the student gov- SOUTH GEORGIA! 'Z ____ | Pat Caesarano and Ellis Sloan are candidates for the office of vice The Pi Chi fraternity will hold their first open house of the current school year at their fraternity house at 1032 Coral Way af-their views on any subject before i ter tonight’s football game. The the student body. During the football season, the last fifteen minutes of every Thursday 10:30 period will be devoted to pep meetings with the revamped cheerleading squad taking charge. The next class meetings, which will take place Thursday, Novem- Dr. Rafael Belaunde, former head of the Latin-American department of the university, is at the present time in Mexico bassador from his counry, Peru. Dr. Belaunde, for many years an exile from his native country, was appointed last July to fulfill this important office by President Benavides. This makes the second time he has been given recognition by a great nation of the western Miami Looking For New Deal As Hurricanes Play At Moore Park Tonight fraternity cordially invites the entire student body to attend and I hemisphere. In February, become acquainted with the mem-1 he represented the University of t>ers* ! Havana during its third centenial. The, committee in charge of the j In the summer of 1930 Dr. Be-affair consists of Ed. Hodsdon, j launde brought his family to Coral Jack Carr, Bill Shillington, Pat j Gables. Several months later, fol- Caesarano and Bill Maloney. The | lowing /the downfall of the San- ber 16, will be held in the follow- decorations will be carried out in I ,chez Cerro, presidency of Peru, he ing places: seniors, room 222; ju-) a collegiate motif with colored j was called by the leader of the lights as ground decorations. The music will be furnished by the “Miamelodians,” a new stu- mors, 220; sophomores, 218; freshmen, 200. The next “Y” meetings, to be held November 9, will be in the girls’ social hall and in dent orchestra composed of mem revolution, Senor Samanez Ocampo, to be his advisor. “The most honest and able of Peruvians” was the phrase Ocampo used in tele- room 218. Lois Taylor will be in j bers of the university band. An | grams announcing the appoint charge of one and Emerson Fahr- j attractive program will be offered ney of the other. Large posters will be made and put up in prominent places in order that all students will be informed before each Thursday just what is scheduled for that day. President Ashe has passed on the student affairs program as arranged by Miss Booth. consisting of local university talent. The fraternity offers an inviting spot to celebrate Miami’s first football victory. Psychology Forum The Psychology Forum meets Monday at 1:30 in room 282. Officers will be elected at this time. END OF RUSH WEEK SATURDAY NIGHT; SORORITIES TO EXTEND BIDS MONDAY Be- Rush week for the sororities on • home of Miss Marian Pierce, the campus of the university will | The Lambda Phi sorority opened close Saturday night at seven rugh week with a seance Monday o’clock and “silence” will be ob served Sunday. Monday the girls will receive their bids to the various sororities. There are five sororities on the campus which are the Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Tau, Lambda Phi, Sigma Phi, and Zeta Phi. The rush week activities for the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority were Everybody’s Birthday Party” in the sorority room Monday and an oriental party Wednesday at the home of Mrs. W. E. Strawinski. oday the sorority will entertain with a collegiate party in the room The Delta Tau sorority lts rush season with and a studio party Thursday in j the sorority room. The sorority will entertain at tea Saturday from four to six at the home of Miss Roma Pape. The Sigma Phi sorority began the rush week with a formal tea at the home of Miss Catherine Sullivan Tuesday and a cabaret party in the sorority room Thursday. The sorority will entertain with a j pirate party this afternoon in the sorority room. The rush week activities of the Zeta Phi sorority were a yachting ment. At this juncture, Dr. launde was obliged to leave duties in the university and for six months he was in Peru fostering the “National Concentration” of forces for future elections, a patriotic attempt to maintain the “Union sacre” of all Peruvians before the 1931 -presidential election, a critical point in the country’s history. Realizing the impossibility of accomplishing the great task, he returned to the university and predicted the tragic end of the Sanchez Cerro administration. His public letter of farewell to the Peruvians is recognized today as (Continued on page 3) Miami’s “New Deal” in Hurri-am-1 cane athletics will be inaugurated at eight o’clock tonight at the Moore Park Stadium as Tommy McCann’s “Mystery” team opens their 1933 football schedule against the hustling South Georgia outfit from Douglas, Georgia. With several weeks of hard training under their belts, the Hur-1930, | ricanes will take the field tonight in an attempt to chalk up victory number one on their season’s schedule. The team as a whole is in excellent condition and the players are eager to get into action. A few minor injuries have hampered the squad somewhat but they are not serious enough to cause any apprehension on the part of the coaches. Charlie “Half-pint” Baker, flashy half-back, who is just recuperating from an attack of influenza, Roy Waugh, veteran linesman and Tommy Thompson, quar- ts j terback, are definitely out of tonight’s game but will probably see (Continued on page six) president, left vacant by the retirement of Aileen Booth. Miss Booth is performing the duties of president in place of Stanford Kimbrough, retired presidentelect. There are two vacancies in the (justices’ office; I. J. Varner, Robert Turner, Andy Shaw and Jimmy Abras are competing. They will take the places of Betty Burns and Howard Buck, who will not return to school this year. Nedra McNamara, secretary-treasurer, is in charge of the election, which will be held in room 201, at the northeast corner of the building. This will be a secret ballot election and no voting by proxy can be allowed. Fraternities and school organizations will be permitted representatives at the official counting, which will begin sometime after 3:30. John Hester, chief justice, will swear in the new officers before the first senate meeting. The senate meets every first and third Tuesday in the month. Fernando Belaunde, former student in the Architectural department of the university, is now at- Y. W. C. A. NOTICE The Y. W. C. A. will hold a cabinet meeting Friday at 2:30 in the “Y.” room. All cabinet members tending Texas State university at are urged to attend. A short Austin, Texas. meeting was held last Friday. BACK-FENCE CONVERSATION REVEALS YOUNG SOPHISTICATES NOT SO HOT RADIO PROGRAM ‘Classroom of the Air,” daily at 4:45 P. M. Over WIOD A gossipy woman has been di- , mer. Pirn, where do all of those vulging the secrets of our shy and ] other girls we saw you with fit in- began ! party Tuesday and a collegiate ______deck party j carnival Thursday in the sorority Monda afternoon and an oriental i room. The sorority will entertain tea Tuesday in the sorority room. | with a buffet supper this after-Thursday the sorority entertained noon at the home of Mrs. P. E. With a Delta Tau cabaret at the ' Montanus. Friday, 20th — “Scientific Fakes,” by Dr. W. O. Walker. Saturday, 21st — Song recital by Helen Flanagan. Monday, 23rd — Tropical Forestry talk dedicated to Cuba, Dr. John C. Gifford. Tuesday, 24th — Special program arranged by students. Wednesday, 25th — Piano recital by Mr. Mendez and Miss Asher. Thursday, 26th — “The Names of German States,” by Mrs. W. B. Rosborough. retiring Adonis’s like young Dan-sky. Here are the secrets of the secretive young men: “Surprise” should be the heading of this paragraph, for that is just exactly what Bunty did to Pat this summer! Bunty drove into Pat’s home town entirely unexpected, and where was Pat?— Well -— They finally located him at the town restaurant — eating (?). Poor Pat had a lot of ex-| plaining to do and Bunty swal-| lowed it — mebbe. However, the | cute little town girls all waited | patiently until Bunty left town and | once more left the coast clear for them. Pat states that one’s home town should form a sanctuary not invadable by college girls. Pirn Kimbrough, a shy looking boy, is reputed to have gone steady with Margaret Johnson this sum- to the picture? Don’t you1 know that a two-timing man is a detriment to society and poor unsuspecting girls? We now name Ellis Sloan the ^‘Before and After” man, and an appropriate name it is too. It was Burgettstown girls before and after Bettye’s visit. Did you show the home girls the coal mine too, or are they wise to that? According to Ellis, these northern girls aren’t so terribly bad—Jack seemed to sympathize with his brother. We understand that Jack and Ellis took both cars full of junior high girls t® a track meet. The older Jack gets the more he seems to revert to youth — perhaps he hopes to glean some of their young freshness. That is the only excuse we can find to offer. (Continued on page six) Al/ 10 w us, individually and collectively, to give every activity one »rjr UV11, lUIVIVC; Uivac, Bob Reinert and Charles Staltman, j Mary Ann Ayers, and Louise Dorn, baritones. ¡Elimination will take place Tues- concerts can be had for $3. The single admission is 40 cents. 20-man relay, 10-man water polo team, medley relay, 100 meter, two or three-man team; diving, a two- uins' form held
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 20, 1933 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1933-10-20 |
Coverage Temporal | 1930-1939 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (6 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_19331020 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19331020 |
Digital ID | mhc_19331020_001 |
Full Text | THE MIAMI HURRICANE THE OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI VoL. 8. CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA, OCTOBER 20, 1933 NO. 3 POLLS OPEN TODAY FROM 8:30 To 3:30 BOOTH ANNOUNCES DEFINITE STUDENT AFFAIRS PROGRAM Assembly Once A Month Will Have Well Planned Entertainment FORUM PROPOSED Senate Convenes November 2 For First Time This Year Y. M. C. A. And Y. W. C. A. To Meet Meetings of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. have been scheduled for next Thursday, October 26. A special invitation has been extended by Lois Taylor, leader of the womens organization, to all new girls. Emerson Fahrney will be in charge of the men’s group. All University men are invited. A definite program for student affairs has been planned by Aileen Booth, president of the student body, which will go into effect November 2. Under this schedule the | —--------------------- first Thursday in every month will ! pT pTJT tlOTTQTT be devoted to senate meeting, the XTX X^XXX XX U second Thursday to Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. meetings, the third Thursday to class meetings and the fourth Thursday to general assembly. A well planned program will feature every assembly which will include plays, noted speakers, student forum and miscellaneous entertainment. The student forum is a new departure and is expected to be popular. This will- give all students ample opportunity to state DR. BELAUNDE, SR. NOW IN MEXICO Use Of Student Activities Books Ticket-takers at the University games have been instructed not to honor sudent activities books unless the name of the student appears on the front cover of each book and each admission ticket is signed by the student to whom this book is issued. The books are not transferable, and will not be replaced if lost. Tickets are void if detached. VICE PRESIDENT TWO SENATORS TO BE ELECTED Caesarano And Sloan Are Only Candidates For Vice President VOTE IN ROOM 201 OPEN TONIGHT AFTER GAME Entire Student Body Invited To Attend Open House On Coral Way Noted Statesman, Teacher Is Ambassador To Nation South Of Us MYSTERY TEAM OPENS AGAINST Abras, Shaw, Turner, Varner Running For Justice Vacancies The election booth will be open from 8:30 until 3:30 today, to fill the vacancies in the student gov- SOUTH GEORGIA! 'Z ____ | Pat Caesarano and Ellis Sloan are candidates for the office of vice The Pi Chi fraternity will hold their first open house of the current school year at their fraternity house at 1032 Coral Way af-their views on any subject before i ter tonight’s football game. The the student body. During the football season, the last fifteen minutes of every Thursday 10:30 period will be devoted to pep meetings with the revamped cheerleading squad taking charge. The next class meetings, which will take place Thursday, Novem- Dr. Rafael Belaunde, former head of the Latin-American department of the university, is at the present time in Mexico bassador from his counry, Peru. Dr. Belaunde, for many years an exile from his native country, was appointed last July to fulfill this important office by President Benavides. This makes the second time he has been given recognition by a great nation of the western Miami Looking For New Deal As Hurricanes Play At Moore Park Tonight fraternity cordially invites the entire student body to attend and I hemisphere. In February, become acquainted with the mem-1 he represented the University of t>ers* ! Havana during its third centenial. The, committee in charge of the j In the summer of 1930 Dr. Be-affair consists of Ed. Hodsdon, j launde brought his family to Coral Jack Carr, Bill Shillington, Pat j Gables. Several months later, fol- Caesarano and Bill Maloney. The | lowing /the downfall of the San- ber 16, will be held in the follow- decorations will be carried out in I ,chez Cerro, presidency of Peru, he ing places: seniors, room 222; ju-) a collegiate motif with colored j was called by the leader of the lights as ground decorations. The music will be furnished by the “Miamelodians,” a new stu- mors, 220; sophomores, 218; freshmen, 200. The next “Y” meetings, to be held November 9, will be in the girls’ social hall and in dent orchestra composed of mem revolution, Senor Samanez Ocampo, to be his advisor. “The most honest and able of Peruvians” was the phrase Ocampo used in tele- room 218. Lois Taylor will be in j bers of the university band. An | grams announcing the appoint charge of one and Emerson Fahr- j attractive program will be offered ney of the other. Large posters will be made and put up in prominent places in order that all students will be informed before each Thursday just what is scheduled for that day. President Ashe has passed on the student affairs program as arranged by Miss Booth. consisting of local university talent. The fraternity offers an inviting spot to celebrate Miami’s first football victory. Psychology Forum The Psychology Forum meets Monday at 1:30 in room 282. Officers will be elected at this time. END OF RUSH WEEK SATURDAY NIGHT; SORORITIES TO EXTEND BIDS MONDAY Be- Rush week for the sororities on • home of Miss Marian Pierce, the campus of the university will | The Lambda Phi sorority opened close Saturday night at seven rugh week with a seance Monday o’clock and “silence” will be ob served Sunday. Monday the girls will receive their bids to the various sororities. There are five sororities on the campus which are the Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Tau, Lambda Phi, Sigma Phi, and Zeta Phi. The rush week activities for the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority were Everybody’s Birthday Party” in the sorority room Monday and an oriental party Wednesday at the home of Mrs. W. E. Strawinski. oday the sorority will entertain with a collegiate party in the room The Delta Tau sorority lts rush season with and a studio party Thursday in j the sorority room. The sorority will entertain at tea Saturday from four to six at the home of Miss Roma Pape. The Sigma Phi sorority began the rush week with a formal tea at the home of Miss Catherine Sullivan Tuesday and a cabaret party in the sorority room Thursday. The sorority will entertain with a j pirate party this afternoon in the sorority room. The rush week activities of the Zeta Phi sorority were a yachting ment. At this juncture, Dr. launde was obliged to leave duties in the university and for six months he was in Peru fostering the “National Concentration” of forces for future elections, a patriotic attempt to maintain the “Union sacre” of all Peruvians before the 1931 -presidential election, a critical point in the country’s history. Realizing the impossibility of accomplishing the great task, he returned to the university and predicted the tragic end of the Sanchez Cerro administration. His public letter of farewell to the Peruvians is recognized today as (Continued on page 3) Miami’s “New Deal” in Hurri-am-1 cane athletics will be inaugurated at eight o’clock tonight at the Moore Park Stadium as Tommy McCann’s “Mystery” team opens their 1933 football schedule against the hustling South Georgia outfit from Douglas, Georgia. With several weeks of hard training under their belts, the Hur-1930, | ricanes will take the field tonight in an attempt to chalk up victory number one on their season’s schedule. The team as a whole is in excellent condition and the players are eager to get into action. A few minor injuries have hampered the squad somewhat but they are not serious enough to cause any apprehension on the part of the coaches. Charlie “Half-pint” Baker, flashy half-back, who is just recuperating from an attack of influenza, Roy Waugh, veteran linesman and Tommy Thompson, quar- ts j terback, are definitely out of tonight’s game but will probably see (Continued on page six) president, left vacant by the retirement of Aileen Booth. Miss Booth is performing the duties of president in place of Stanford Kimbrough, retired presidentelect. There are two vacancies in the (justices’ office; I. J. Varner, Robert Turner, Andy Shaw and Jimmy Abras are competing. They will take the places of Betty Burns and Howard Buck, who will not return to school this year. Nedra McNamara, secretary-treasurer, is in charge of the election, which will be held in room 201, at the northeast corner of the building. This will be a secret ballot election and no voting by proxy can be allowed. Fraternities and school organizations will be permitted representatives at the official counting, which will begin sometime after 3:30. John Hester, chief justice, will swear in the new officers before the first senate meeting. The senate meets every first and third Tuesday in the month. Fernando Belaunde, former student in the Architectural department of the university, is now at- Y. W. C. A. NOTICE The Y. W. C. A. will hold a cabinet meeting Friday at 2:30 in the “Y.” room. All cabinet members tending Texas State university at are urged to attend. A short Austin, Texas. meeting was held last Friday. BACK-FENCE CONVERSATION REVEALS YOUNG SOPHISTICATES NOT SO HOT RADIO PROGRAM ‘Classroom of the Air,” daily at 4:45 P. M. Over WIOD A gossipy woman has been di- , mer. Pirn, where do all of those vulging the secrets of our shy and ] other girls we saw you with fit in- began ! party Tuesday and a collegiate ______deck party j carnival Thursday in the sorority Monda afternoon and an oriental i room. The sorority will entertain tea Tuesday in the sorority room. | with a buffet supper this after-Thursday the sorority entertained noon at the home of Mrs. P. E. With a Delta Tau cabaret at the ' Montanus. Friday, 20th — “Scientific Fakes,” by Dr. W. O. Walker. Saturday, 21st — Song recital by Helen Flanagan. Monday, 23rd — Tropical Forestry talk dedicated to Cuba, Dr. John C. Gifford. Tuesday, 24th — Special program arranged by students. Wednesday, 25th — Piano recital by Mr. Mendez and Miss Asher. Thursday, 26th — “The Names of German States,” by Mrs. W. B. Rosborough. retiring Adonis’s like young Dan-sky. Here are the secrets of the secretive young men: “Surprise” should be the heading of this paragraph, for that is just exactly what Bunty did to Pat this summer! Bunty drove into Pat’s home town entirely unexpected, and where was Pat?— Well -— They finally located him at the town restaurant — eating (?). Poor Pat had a lot of ex-| plaining to do and Bunty swal-| lowed it — mebbe. However, the | cute little town girls all waited | patiently until Bunty left town and | once more left the coast clear for them. Pat states that one’s home town should form a sanctuary not invadable by college girls. Pirn Kimbrough, a shy looking boy, is reputed to have gone steady with Margaret Johnson this sum- to the picture? Don’t you1 know that a two-timing man is a detriment to society and poor unsuspecting girls? We now name Ellis Sloan the ^‘Before and After” man, and an appropriate name it is too. It was Burgettstown girls before and after Bettye’s visit. Did you show the home girls the coal mine too, or are they wise to that? According to Ellis, these northern girls aren’t so terribly bad—Jack seemed to sympathize with his brother. We understand that Jack and Ellis took both cars full of junior high girls t® a track meet. The older Jack gets the more he seems to revert to youth — perhaps he hopes to glean some of their young freshness. That is the only excuse we can find to offer. (Continued on page six) Al/ 10 w us, individually and collectively, to give every activity one »rjr UV11, lUIVIVC; Uivac, Bob Reinert and Charles Staltman, j Mary Ann Ayers, and Louise Dorn, baritones. ¡Elimination will take place Tues- concerts can be had for $3. The single admission is 40 cents. 20-man relay, 10-man water polo team, medley relay, 100 meter, two or three-man team; diving, a two- uins' form held |
Archive | mhc_19331020_001.tif |
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