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i SÿSs c al am is nq“iri«sJt. con,|Sent¡j| W ig* £1 W T T*-^ JL ä ä mJ ib ¡brncane Editors Endorse Weiss ^ dent ¡government elections coming up tiith ®|l Hurricane feels it is more important ^’before that students think carefully about . e'cf I ¥1 vili vote for. , ,.0uld be lb- ......... fins 1 |ent government. For only if a strona HI __ lIikIpnl HURRICANE OPINION 'affairs as a par- f * ' # [>e the most important year in the a OF MIAMI IE DIVISION, ¡EARCH o participate ipmental me-esearch with ¡-depressant and female, )e who expe-anxiety,'rep-.depression, (ability, diffi-and appetite this project ial and your be approxi-week for.o u may moke ig 350-6464 5 P.M. Mon- idge of auto--ork in whole-mission basis, 5-0376. > 3 bedroom June 1, $100 6. ekends ol oungeoupi» ¡ ,ne bedroom md July- Cal1 EDS 545; guaran-i nos, di*'9’ ¡665-614'- V $40 guar0fl‘ rs, 17971 S, 5-7756. $40 guof0"' j Waterbc®5 lefore 9 P,n1' ¡661-5243- ed,<J ' 284-4006' new Pri-* *. i $50- ^ have« 5I'. il bet'*"1’ isi*c j3i i UNITE! Be. dng Com. enibership ;ges. Send Box 1336, 13. coiih1 «1 slUfflê’e ran »tu<lent government Ire save,! Caring-................................. incred- the vear has been swimming in an inc 5 f -niut and cheap politics. This is why tin ° dilors feel it is important to endorse can-lf‘ r’s election on the basis of close this year ir,'.iMi«mniiiMiiiiii» 0te of the editors, the Hurricane decidedly en-lt‘ Weiss Sami Burstyn, Howard Zusman and Jeff stu Ai,p executive office positions in the 1972 Stu .n fortne government Ci ¡t sla« in ip.-- candidates compose the strongest student gov-The i°“_r in reCent years at the University of Miami. the slate for president, Stu Weiss, without a - the best working knowledge of student govern-¡til l,as eii-known as a spokesman for the students and ¥ef„!lnoed a strong rapport with the administration is solely responsible for reviving interest in the 8Fs. outmoded academic calendar. As president he Sty« __- ~ fh« rlfÎTrinrt f nr/’o Caiman of’theacnt0tier Strong fighter for »^ents rights. As to find Buis Student,s Ri§hts Commission it is not unusual iours of morning Selmg StUdentS in tr°ubl* in the wee studem^H* t 3lS0 refP°nsive to the needs of the resident Hall and hac fS served wel1 as a house governor in Mahoney " : ° Sfved on theMRHA visitation and alcohol- ic oeverage restructuring committees. mi»uri!!Q(0U811 n°St candldates could easily spew off a list of Honors ProBu^ftyn s attainment of a 3.4 average in the Honors Program should not go un-noticed. Third candidate on the Weiss ticket is Howard Zusman, who is running for treasurer. Zusman has the right qualifications for the job he is seeking. He is a finance major in the School of Business. In the past he has served as an administrative assistant to the treasurer of student government. He has also served as a representative to the Interfraternity Council and has done an outstanding job publicizing Greek events at a time when the fraternity system is in dire need of support. Finally, Jeff Woliman, candidate for the newly-created position of executive secretary, is certainly another hard worker who is no stranger to student government. Without Wollman’s careful investigation UM students would not have known about the $500 illegally spent for a student government Homecoming Party. As deputy attorney general of the Student Body Government, Woliman prosecuted the current vice president and treasurer for their alleged roles in the Homecoming party fiasco. Woliman was also the one to expose the infamous “tenure letter,” which threatened UM faculty members last year for their “political beliefs.” Woliman is also in\Jj^edin""comf ticipant in the SUMMOf^rogra? We feel these candidates can revive a dying student government in light of the poor showing by this year’s slate of officers. For once we have candidates who can work together, who won’t rush at the opportunity to stab each other in the back, and who compose the only slat that is philosophically alligned. While other candidates in this year’s election are attempting to ride into office by finding ways of disqualifying their opponents, the students have another choice. Students have a group of candidates who can muster a vote on their merits and not by disqualifying their opponents. Last year we saw candidates rushing to the Election Commission in an attempt to get rid of their opponents on technicalities. We are seeing a repeat of that this year by another slate of candidates. Weiss-Burstyn-Zu^man and Woliman do combine a strong team. Each has the qualifications to hold office. If the slate wins it won’t be because there was only one strong candidate pulling the rest of the team through. Each of them deserves your vote. serve as the driving force behind its revi-accomplishments would fill too E/«>i fc. all of Weiss’ —B. .HP.......BB Lis‘ni However, his efforts were a major factor behind i^uon of the Bachelor of General Studies Degree, the tBailbond Program, and the Student’s Rights Commis-Iwas instrumental in revising the university’s search ¿ure policy and lowering camPus parking fines from $3 ¡1. iformer treasurer of student government, Weiss is cer-*„0 ,tranger to the needs oi*the students. i 3Urstyn, a candidate for vice president on the Voi. 46 No. 42 Winner of College Journalism’s Highest Award — Pacemaker 1970 Wednesday, April 21, 1971 284-4401 lil Bonds lay Go late-Wide IS bailbonding program ¡¡soon be offering it’s ser-s to UM students who larrested on other cam-sin the state. Secretary for Inter-Colle-Affairs Norm Taplin the SBG Student’s pi's Commission Chair-Jiave sent letters to Ms all over the state in Into find out what other Ms have bailbond proms or would be willing to iteihem. % bailbond program has ®siich a success,” Taplin Chat this is the logical Ustep to it.” said they had been PS °n the project since but only recently Ned other schools. wanted to incorporate 15 tyPes °f legal assis-°ur plan, but after I what other schools "e had a problem of >«»»,” Taplin said. Du 1 JUst concentrate on ■ Sa'd ‘‘we’ll get an !|y and work things lodler schools respond Ny. he said Ri other schools will or n°t, it’s certainly a try,» bici Ídí -° the plan if a ls arrested on a insu "“esiea i campus, the ___ ït|chonp! J,'6 t0 ut'lizc ^Present b(a' b0nd service Nation of his l.D. In-Treed Where have all the flowers gone? And the shrubbery and the underbrifch and the trees? Seems as though the Physical Plant wiped them out in an effort to beautify the place. As a UM student surveys the area behind the Lowe Art Gallery, Nature seems to be saying, “My waters are dead and my earth is bare and I won’t be around much longer.” Election Balloting Begins Tomorrow on a ----—---- • 5 £ ‘Fraternity’ Goes tersely 1JPa siedi a student Jticipating school is '0 this «e t0 San. Every il^ttakePartlCÌPatÌn8 TEP Plans Coed Chapter area, he will Use UM’s bail- student liability for Tau Epsilon Phi, Tau Xi chapter at UM, is presently studying the possibilities of re-strueturing into a Co-educational chapter. ;s>” Taplin “This would be a great c ^trasts in Culture firmes Until Sun. lWjJSts 'n Culture Week, sponsored by UM s Piogram c°ntinue until Sunday April 25. wdl present a lecture on the Student Union at 8 p.m. ’0w Gening at 8 p.m., folksinger Tony St. Thomas le Student Union. Si the Friday’ there wiI1 be an art sh0W 00 the §r°UndS . student union and the graduate school. I? treaLSPOnsorinS the Roberta Flack concert to be held ^ ent plant Saturday. ^.CoJre Week festivities will end Sunday with two Kl«g Murray” at 7 p.m. in LC110 and 9 p.m. break away from the traditional ideas about fraternities. But in fact it would further enlarge the concept o universal fraternalism,” Bill Lizewski, chairman of the chapter’s ad hoc study committee said. “The possibilities of a totally co-ed Greek chapter are unbelievable,” he said. The plan was first discussed in October, when the University of Maryland’s TEP chapter began a similar program. The study committee s re-was presented to the brotherhood during Wednesday night’s meeting and accepted without a dissenting vote. port TEP “We will not attempt to institute this program with-nut full backing from the Brotherhood and recognition hV the proper UM and our national .raternity authori- des,” Alan Kristel,TEP’s president said. “This plan would expand the meaning of ‘fraternity’ into a modern Greek ‘community.’ If the co-ed program is initiated, we would like to call our chapter Tau Epsilon Phi, the Men and Women’s Greek Community,” Kristel said. “Our first big hassle was in the Dean of Men’s Office,” Bernie Siegel, a TEP brother said. “No one knew who was supposed to give us the proper university permission. “Our next step is establishing a rush procedure to encourage both men and. women to look at our house and to develop, in actuality, a new “Community” of Greek thought. We are basically going to work from the ground up,” Lizewski said. If any student, male or female, would like to comment on> or volunteer ideas or themselves for this progiam, they may contact Lizewski at 666-5595 or Kristel at 667- By JILL MOVSHIN Of The Hurricane Staff Balloting for the 1971-72 Student Body Government elections wilt be held tomorrow and Friday. All undergraduate students including graduating seniors are eligible to vote. There are 23 candidates listed on the ballot from which voters will choose a new executive board; president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and senators from the schools of engineering, arts and sciences, business and candidates at large. Candidates names who are running unopposed and seeking positions on the Student Entertainment Committee will not appear on the ballot. There will be two polling places located on campus, one in front of the Memorial Bldg, reading room and the other in the Lower Lounge of the Student Union. Students who present a valid UM l.D. may vote at either place from the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on both days. The paper ballots which will be tabulated by computer list each office with the candidates name and a corresponding number next to the name. Voters will make their choice and put the corresponding number in the box located next to each office. Three referenda will also appear on the ballot. They are: • Do you approve an increase of $1.00 in the Student Acitvity Fee for improvements to and expansion of campus intramural recreational facilities including; resurfacing and refurbishing of basketball-volleyball courts; construction of a multi-purpose outdoor individual activity area for activities like golf, archery and construction of 'a multi-purpose room with showers for activities like wrestling and slimnastics; construction of lights, new handball-paddle-ball courts; the addition of new tennis-basketball courts; and lighting for night-time use of all recreational areas? • Do you approve of an increase of forty-five cents in the Student Activity Fee for the purpose of maintaining an on-campus no cover-charge film series? • Should the Student Activity Fee be increased seventy-five cents to be given to the United Fund? If approved, this money will be earmarked to agencies of the United Fund recommended by the SBG Senate. expenditure report has Continued On Page 2 * ★ -A- Here Are Presidential Hopefulsl Ray Bellamy Mike Evans Stu Weiss Paulsen Here Tonight By BARBARA KERR Of The Hurricane Staff Pat Paulsen, 1968 U.S. Presidential write-in candidate, and “a common, ordinary, simple savior of America’s destiny,” will speak tonight at 8 p.m. on the Student Union Patio. Anyone attending the “Pat Paulsen Looks At The 70’s” lecture will be required to bring a pencil, because Pat, in his constant search to learn more about people, will be giving everybody who attends, the “National Mediocrity Test.” This scientifically developed examination will be personally graded by Pat and mailed back to each respondent. In this way Pat will know how mediocre his audiences are and the audiences will know how they rank on the national mediocrity scale. “The unprecedented punster, a comedian with sad eyes and a body to match” has always been interested in the entertainment field, but successfully eluded discovery on Art Linkletter’s “Talent Scouts” program before he became an “overnight” star in 1967. Son of a Norwegian father who used to write long letters to newspaper editors, Pat quit San Francisco City College to become an unknown little theatre actor, a photostat machine operator, and a worker in a Nevada gypsum plant. Paulsen’s career got a boost when he met the Smothers Brothers and sold them a song, “Chocolate,” which was included in their million selling album, “The Continued On Page 3 • i S /,s *ÿ :jç ‘Common, Ordinary, Simple Savior1 ... Pd>. Paulsen looks at the ’70’s
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, April 21, 1971 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1971-04-21 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (22 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_19710421 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19710421 |
Digital ID | mhc_19710421_001 |
Full Text |
i
SÿSs
c al am is nq“iri«sJt. con,|Sent¡j|
W ig* £1 W T T*-^
JL ä ä mJ ib
¡brncane Editors Endorse Weiss
^ dent ¡government elections coming up tiith ®|l Hurricane feels it is more important ^’before that students think carefully about
. e'cf
I ¥1
vili vote for.
, ,.0uld be lb- .........
fins 1 |ent government. For only if a strona
HI __ lIikIpnl
HURRICANE OPINION
'affairs as a par-
f * ' #
[>e the most important year in the
a
OF MIAMI IE DIVISION, ¡EARCH
o participate ipmental me-esearch with ¡-depressant
and female, )e who expe-anxiety,'rep-.depression, (ability, diffi-and appetite
this project ial and your be approxi-week for.o u may moke ig 350-6464 5 P.M. Mon-
idge of auto--ork in whole-mission basis, 5-0376.
> 3 bedroom June 1, $100 6.
ekends ol
oungeoupi» ¡ ,ne bedroom
md July- Cal1
EDS
545; guaran-i nos, di*'9’ ¡665-614'-
V
$40 guar0fl‘ rs, 17971 S, 5-7756.
$40 guof0"' j Waterbc®5 lefore 9 P,n1' ¡661-5243-
ed, |
Archive | mhc_19710421_001.tif |
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