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I ;is kill, ach colleo, )Ur of ounce. ^ in-Mary Opens Football Season Tonight f >ts i! rms Offer Opinion Poll By Melani Van Petten °l The Hurricane Staff -student opinion poll on as dormitory visions and a revised alcohol-average policy will be cir- l^ntenured? to share 2b'-j ^ ...fk Senate 4.« $85 per 665 By IRIS HOROWITZ **'”?£* The Hurricane Staff Board of Trustees c f ER S a 'a« F F E R L l°Wlng untenured fac-ortumtytop pto be elected to the Fac-,t deveiop^yenate. .nd antidepj1^ faculty will vote |e5 next meeting to ei- ’",ird>KCCept 0r reject the • s proposal, d!|kl(iing t0 Sidney Bes- lt5'tearS; rseniairman of the Fac- in,a',rrl Vt f3"ae;in the past unten- ntra11ngc aculty have only been . a;te,bntdid"othave wfc r;°uld be a great step »?d vCEsthluieWSOf ¡od. voi^m-e Wl11 vary> I ,,oo offt to rt, 11 be m°re peo-mP ppli£,| c2mW fr°m When elec' bet^lid. 6 around>” Besvin- thro^l >tvnierl faculty last l„yeitof th VTed ^ per emA p* he UM faculty. Jiis is a/ 9'5 un nf „ 5 a substantial touch P60ple and lt wil1 be mnro ______ . , oth iPP|e° ars of °9e , tension fears nsidered. jation or pent wi ¡ñutes luch mnrcs .......... fe”RQm rePresented , ^adCB;Svlnicksaid. °ed but r-v ise the0^ Want t0 in‘ " u abou» '''«te a-S1Ze °f fbe Faculty n yet>” Besvinick %rs! °perate with 45 j>le nond so fbe enlarged yfD^Nore P^latlon will give —^!’’hesaid°P t0 draW i0M aFaLU,ty, Senate is basi- d^rnine t8ulS at,ve arm for o, 8 ibe UM facuity af. -tie ’(j HUrrLl° be ab*e to use ferSity a"e keep the led ’* r mernbers well in-| ’ Besvinvtk said. culated among UM residents Sept., 24. The 4-page poll, sponsored by MRHA and AWS, will be distributed through mailboxes to resident students in ail dormitories, to graduate and residence hall staffs, and to all parents of resident students. It will consist of questions concerning men’s visitation in women’s dorms, guest visitation during vacations, coed dormitories, and an alcoholic beverage policy for social activities on campus. “The poll is just a basis to see where consensus lies on these issues,” AWS President Nancy Handler explained. “As far as I’m concerned, it won’t be completely valid, because it will include freshmen who will have only been on campus for two weeks.” “The poll will also provide a basis on which to formulate policies on the various issues,” Tony Passarello, MRHA executive secretary and USG representative said. The policies will probably be presented in late November. A separate poll of incoming freshmen concerning cafeteria menus is currently in the dorms, and will probably be processed within ten days. An Alcoholic Beverage Committee, meeting over the summer, has already proposed a revised alcoholic beverage policy for on-campus social events, but the present draft will be rewritten pending adequate legal counsel before it is presented to the administration for approval. The present draft of the proposed policy provides for the use of alvJholic beverag- Alcohol. Visitation Aired es by persons of legal age at social events sponsored by UM student organizations, held in the Student Union, the residence areas, fraternity houses, and Panhellenic Suites. It is proposed that the time and place of the event be registered with the appropriate administrative representative for the area in which the event is held, and that a chaperone be present at all times. Chaperones may be head residents, graduate advisors, or full-time members of the faculty or administration, and must sign the registration form before it is submitted for approval. A policy concerning the use of alcoholic beverages in iioinn the residence halls by persons of legal age is also being researched. “We are gathering information from other schools where such a policy is already in effect,” MRHA Treasurer Randy Davis said. “We’re holding our presentation until after the fall state referendum, because if the legal age is changed to 18, the policy will be modified.” “We feel that the presentation of the visitation polls has proven that the administration is receptive to any policy that is well documented and well presented,” Passarello commented. “We intend to document this so well that no one could have done it better,” Davis added Smith attributed the generally smooth registration this semester to the increased flow of students during the first two days of registration so that “Wednesday afternoon was just a mop-up.” “We put through many more in two days with rain than we did last year without rain,” Associate Registrar Sidney Weisburd said. “Things went well due to preparation and organization by the registration office personnel.” Smith commented on UM’s increased enrollment by noting that most private schools have lost enrollment, “but we’ve increased every year. The trend has been to public junior colleges and four year colleges. I think it’s a sign of health.” He also noted that the tie-up that occurred at the financial aid tables resulted “because so many students need it. It’s an area that has increased tremendously as more people have had to rely on it to get themselves through.” -Photo by MIKE GRAHAM The Library Is Back to Normal Again . .. registration lines finally disappeared Krasnow Says, ‘Update Mass Assembly Policy5 By MARK BERMAN News Editor Undergraduate Student Government President Mark Krasnow has asked for the reorganization of a campus demonstration policy committee to update and re-evaluate the university’s mass assembly policies. In a letter to Donald Kubit, administrative assistant to Vice President for Student Trustee Oscar Dooly Dies Oscar Dooly . . dead at 70 Memorial services for Oscar E. Dooly, a UM trustee since 1944, will be held at 4:30 p.m. Sunday, at Brockway Lecture Hall in the Otto G. Richter Library. Participating in the services will be President Henry King Stanford and the Rev. J. Calvin Rose, minister of the Miami Shores Presbyterian Church. Mr. Dooly served as chairman of the Board of Trustees from 1963 until January 1970 when he chose to become trustee emeritus. Prior to his election as chairman of the Board, Mr. Dooly had been vice chairman for 10 years and had also served as chairman of the executive and finance committees. “Oscar Dooly is the last of the trio of Dan Mahoney and Arthur Ungar, all suc- cessful local businessmen, who as university trustees, undertook to win converts for university support from the Miami business community during its early years,” UM President Henry King Stanford said. “Dooly, along with the late Dan Mahoney, chairman of the Board in 1962, persuaded the Board to take a chance on me and therefore his death is a great loss personally and institutionally.” Vice President for Financial Affairs and Treasurer Eugene E. Cohen said, “The university has lost one of its greatest friends, and I personally have lost a trustee friend with whom I worked close- Continued on Page 8 Affairs William Butler, Krasnow said there was a need for “ongoing evaluation” of campus demonstration policy, which was provided for in the original document. The current demonstration policy was set in May, 1969, by a 3-3-3 committee, comprised of three faculty members, three administrators and three students. It stated that the university recognized the right of members of the academic community to express their ideas freely, but that physical violence, destruction of property and disruption of every day UM activities would not be tolerated. It also stated that demonstrators were prohibited from remaining in any university building or in the academic area of the university after closing hours without proper approval. Krasnow said many students feel this policy is unfair and in violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution. “Lots of people feel it should be legal to sit in the President’s office 24 hours as long as they’re not destroying property or disrupting,” Krasnow said. “Some people feel they can best express their feelings by sitting-in.” He said that the university should take another look at its demonstration policy and up-date it before prosecuting students for last May’s sit-ins. Krasnow said it was important to re-activitate the 3-3-3 committee in order to have the policy looked at by people who are students now. “Things have really changed in the two years since the policy was adopted, and with the ongoing war there is a need for demonstration,” Krasnow said. If the committee is reinstated at his request, Krasnow will appoint its three student members as well as 15-member student committee to provide input. Krasnow said the 15-man panel will have students from the “extreme right, the extreme left and the middle.” He Wasn’t Included The Hurricane would like to apologize for mistakenly reporting that Rick Merwin was one one of the students indicted by the State Attorney’s office for the Ash Building sit-in. Mr. Merwir no* among those indicted for the May 7 demonstration, as tb& State Attorney’s office has no record of him ever being involved. Be Circulated Sept, 24 By ED LANG Hurricane Sports Editor The UM football team opens its 1970 gridiron campaign tonight against the Indians of William and Mary. Game time is 8 p.m. in the Orange Bowl and buses will be leaving the campus at 6:30 from the 960 and 1968 complexes, Eaton Hall, and Mahoney Hall. Cost for tickets are $1 and can be obtained from resident advisors and at the main desks of each dorm. The buses are a service of USG, AWS, IFC, and MRHA. Students can enter the game free of charge with their UM ID cards. They are also allowed one guest with the ID. William and Mary comes to Miami with a 3-7 record. From all indications, this year should be no different. The last time UM played William and Mary was in 1946. Miami came out on top in that contest 13-3. Though the game doesn’t have the makings of two national powers fighting it out for a NCAA championship, the game is nonetheless an important one for head coach Charlie Tate. This is Tate’s last year on his contract and renewal of it depends on two things: a winning team, and an exciting team. For excitement Tate will have for the first time in many years, an established quarterback, Kelly Cochrane, who a year ago was a green sophomore destined to be red shirted. When Tate ran into quarterback problems at the beginning of the season, Cochrane was rushed on Will This Be Charlie’s Big Year? . .. UM’s first eleven game season begins tonight ville, Kansas led the nation’s junior collegians in receiving in 1968, scooping up 61 passes for 880 yards and 19 touchdowns. In practice Brennan has seemed very impressive. At the other end at wideout is Joe Schmidt. Schmidt is being pushed for All American along with defensive back Tony Stawarz. Schmidt dazzled the Houston team last season catching a 75 yard pass on the first play from scrimmage that was a touchdown. In the second quarter of that game he grabbed a 76 yard pass. Defensively, Tony Stawarz has been picked by a number of pre-seasOn polls as an All American defensive back, despite the fact that he sat out last season with a knee injury. He was in on 99 tackles in two years and is on the punt return team. By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Assistant News Editor UM’s fall registration ran smoothly this week as 13,192 students were processed by 5:00 p.m. Wednesday. This number marks an increase over last fall’s 12,572 figure and it does not include graduate or in-service students who total about 5,000. “We’re a little ahead of last year when there were 18,026 students,” UM Registrar George Smith said. “I’ve predicted 18,500 for this year which is a slight increase.” Positiv l0» bow many 'urse-"buti vered thn GVen those "oba Ryt M ★ i Thun -Photo by MIKE NEFF the field and performed adequately. His first game was the third contest against LSU and though he played in only seven and a fraction games, he managed to shatter many passing records held by former U great George Mira. The Indiana Hoosier set a record for most touchdowns in a season (11), most passing yards in a game (343 against Houston), and most touchdown passes in a game (four against Houston). In the backfield are two running backs with breakaway potential, Tom “Silky” Sullivan and Chuck Foreman. Foreman may not start, however, due to a badly bruised ankle suffered in a scrimmage a week ago. Backing up Foreman will be Bobby Best who is in his fourth year in a UM jersey. Snaring Cochrane’s passes are two speedy ends with good pass catching ability. Don Brennan, a junior college transfer from Coffey- KELLY COCHRANE TOM SULLIVAN TONY STAWARZ These Men Can Help Put Her There Will CM Be at the Top of the Ratings? As 13,192 Register Enrollment Jumps
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, September 18, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-09-18 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (14 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_19700918 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19700918 |
Digital ID | mhc_19700918_001 |
Full Text | I ;is kill, ach colleo, )Ur of ounce. ^ in-Mary Opens Football Season Tonight f >ts i! rms Offer Opinion Poll By Melani Van Petten °l The Hurricane Staff -student opinion poll on as dormitory visions and a revised alcohol-average policy will be cir- l^ntenured? to share 2b'-j ^ ...fk Senate 4.« $85 per 665 By IRIS HOROWITZ **'”?£* The Hurricane Staff Board of Trustees c f ER S a 'a« F F E R L l°Wlng untenured fac-ortumtytop pto be elected to the Fac-,t deveiop^yenate. .nd antidepj1^ faculty will vote |e5 next meeting to ei- ’",ird>KCCept 0r reject the • s proposal, d!|kl(iing t0 Sidney Bes- lt5'tearS; rseniairman of the Fac- in,a',rrl Vt f3"ae;in the past unten- ntra11ngc aculty have only been . a;te,bntdid"othave wfc r;°uld be a great step »?d vCEsthluieWSOf ¡od. voi^m-e Wl11 vary> I ,,oo offt to rt, 11 be m°re peo-mP ppli£,| c2mW fr°m When elec' bet^lid. 6 around>” Besvin- thro^l >tvnierl faculty last l„yeitof th VTed ^ per emA p* he UM faculty. Jiis is a/ 9'5 un nf „ 5 a substantial touch P60ple and lt wil1 be mnro ______ . , oth iPP|e° ars of °9e , tension fears nsidered. jation or pent wi ¡ñutes luch mnrcs .......... fe”RQm rePresented , ^adCB;Svlnicksaid. °ed but r-v ise the0^ Want t0 in‘ " u abou» '''«te a-S1Ze °f fbe Faculty n yet>” Besvinick %rs! °perate with 45 j>le nond so fbe enlarged yfD^Nore P^latlon will give —^!’’hesaid°P t0 draW i0M aFaLU,ty, Senate is basi- d^rnine t8ulS at,ve arm for o, 8 ibe UM facuity af. -tie ’(j HUrrLl° be ab*e to use ferSity a"e keep the led ’* r mernbers well in-| ’ Besvinvtk said. culated among UM residents Sept., 24. The 4-page poll, sponsored by MRHA and AWS, will be distributed through mailboxes to resident students in ail dormitories, to graduate and residence hall staffs, and to all parents of resident students. It will consist of questions concerning men’s visitation in women’s dorms, guest visitation during vacations, coed dormitories, and an alcoholic beverage policy for social activities on campus. “The poll is just a basis to see where consensus lies on these issues,” AWS President Nancy Handler explained. “As far as I’m concerned, it won’t be completely valid, because it will include freshmen who will have only been on campus for two weeks.” “The poll will also provide a basis on which to formulate policies on the various issues,” Tony Passarello, MRHA executive secretary and USG representative said. The policies will probably be presented in late November. A separate poll of incoming freshmen concerning cafeteria menus is currently in the dorms, and will probably be processed within ten days. An Alcoholic Beverage Committee, meeting over the summer, has already proposed a revised alcoholic beverage policy for on-campus social events, but the present draft will be rewritten pending adequate legal counsel before it is presented to the administration for approval. The present draft of the proposed policy provides for the use of alvJholic beverag- Alcohol. Visitation Aired es by persons of legal age at social events sponsored by UM student organizations, held in the Student Union, the residence areas, fraternity houses, and Panhellenic Suites. It is proposed that the time and place of the event be registered with the appropriate administrative representative for the area in which the event is held, and that a chaperone be present at all times. Chaperones may be head residents, graduate advisors, or full-time members of the faculty or administration, and must sign the registration form before it is submitted for approval. A policy concerning the use of alcoholic beverages in iioinn the residence halls by persons of legal age is also being researched. “We are gathering information from other schools where such a policy is already in effect,” MRHA Treasurer Randy Davis said. “We’re holding our presentation until after the fall state referendum, because if the legal age is changed to 18, the policy will be modified.” “We feel that the presentation of the visitation polls has proven that the administration is receptive to any policy that is well documented and well presented,” Passarello commented. “We intend to document this so well that no one could have done it better,” Davis added Smith attributed the generally smooth registration this semester to the increased flow of students during the first two days of registration so that “Wednesday afternoon was just a mop-up.” “We put through many more in two days with rain than we did last year without rain,” Associate Registrar Sidney Weisburd said. “Things went well due to preparation and organization by the registration office personnel.” Smith commented on UM’s increased enrollment by noting that most private schools have lost enrollment, “but we’ve increased every year. The trend has been to public junior colleges and four year colleges. I think it’s a sign of health.” He also noted that the tie-up that occurred at the financial aid tables resulted “because so many students need it. It’s an area that has increased tremendously as more people have had to rely on it to get themselves through.” -Photo by MIKE GRAHAM The Library Is Back to Normal Again . .. registration lines finally disappeared Krasnow Says, ‘Update Mass Assembly Policy5 By MARK BERMAN News Editor Undergraduate Student Government President Mark Krasnow has asked for the reorganization of a campus demonstration policy committee to update and re-evaluate the university’s mass assembly policies. In a letter to Donald Kubit, administrative assistant to Vice President for Student Trustee Oscar Dooly Dies Oscar Dooly . . dead at 70 Memorial services for Oscar E. Dooly, a UM trustee since 1944, will be held at 4:30 p.m. Sunday, at Brockway Lecture Hall in the Otto G. Richter Library. Participating in the services will be President Henry King Stanford and the Rev. J. Calvin Rose, minister of the Miami Shores Presbyterian Church. Mr. Dooly served as chairman of the Board of Trustees from 1963 until January 1970 when he chose to become trustee emeritus. Prior to his election as chairman of the Board, Mr. Dooly had been vice chairman for 10 years and had also served as chairman of the executive and finance committees. “Oscar Dooly is the last of the trio of Dan Mahoney and Arthur Ungar, all suc- cessful local businessmen, who as university trustees, undertook to win converts for university support from the Miami business community during its early years,” UM President Henry King Stanford said. “Dooly, along with the late Dan Mahoney, chairman of the Board in 1962, persuaded the Board to take a chance on me and therefore his death is a great loss personally and institutionally.” Vice President for Financial Affairs and Treasurer Eugene E. Cohen said, “The university has lost one of its greatest friends, and I personally have lost a trustee friend with whom I worked close- Continued on Page 8 Affairs William Butler, Krasnow said there was a need for “ongoing evaluation” of campus demonstration policy, which was provided for in the original document. The current demonstration policy was set in May, 1969, by a 3-3-3 committee, comprised of three faculty members, three administrators and three students. It stated that the university recognized the right of members of the academic community to express their ideas freely, but that physical violence, destruction of property and disruption of every day UM activities would not be tolerated. It also stated that demonstrators were prohibited from remaining in any university building or in the academic area of the university after closing hours without proper approval. Krasnow said many students feel this policy is unfair and in violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution. “Lots of people feel it should be legal to sit in the President’s office 24 hours as long as they’re not destroying property or disrupting,” Krasnow said. “Some people feel they can best express their feelings by sitting-in.” He said that the university should take another look at its demonstration policy and up-date it before prosecuting students for last May’s sit-ins. Krasnow said it was important to re-activitate the 3-3-3 committee in order to have the policy looked at by people who are students now. “Things have really changed in the two years since the policy was adopted, and with the ongoing war there is a need for demonstration,” Krasnow said. If the committee is reinstated at his request, Krasnow will appoint its three student members as well as 15-member student committee to provide input. Krasnow said the 15-man panel will have students from the “extreme right, the extreme left and the middle.” He Wasn’t Included The Hurricane would like to apologize for mistakenly reporting that Rick Merwin was one one of the students indicted by the State Attorney’s office for the Ash Building sit-in. Mr. Merwir no* among those indicted for the May 7 demonstration, as tb& State Attorney’s office has no record of him ever being involved. Be Circulated Sept, 24 By ED LANG Hurricane Sports Editor The UM football team opens its 1970 gridiron campaign tonight against the Indians of William and Mary. Game time is 8 p.m. in the Orange Bowl and buses will be leaving the campus at 6:30 from the 960 and 1968 complexes, Eaton Hall, and Mahoney Hall. Cost for tickets are $1 and can be obtained from resident advisors and at the main desks of each dorm. The buses are a service of USG, AWS, IFC, and MRHA. Students can enter the game free of charge with their UM ID cards. They are also allowed one guest with the ID. William and Mary comes to Miami with a 3-7 record. From all indications, this year should be no different. The last time UM played William and Mary was in 1946. Miami came out on top in that contest 13-3. Though the game doesn’t have the makings of two national powers fighting it out for a NCAA championship, the game is nonetheless an important one for head coach Charlie Tate. This is Tate’s last year on his contract and renewal of it depends on two things: a winning team, and an exciting team. For excitement Tate will have for the first time in many years, an established quarterback, Kelly Cochrane, who a year ago was a green sophomore destined to be red shirted. When Tate ran into quarterback problems at the beginning of the season, Cochrane was rushed on Will This Be Charlie’s Big Year? . .. UM’s first eleven game season begins tonight ville, Kansas led the nation’s junior collegians in receiving in 1968, scooping up 61 passes for 880 yards and 19 touchdowns. In practice Brennan has seemed very impressive. At the other end at wideout is Joe Schmidt. Schmidt is being pushed for All American along with defensive back Tony Stawarz. Schmidt dazzled the Houston team last season catching a 75 yard pass on the first play from scrimmage that was a touchdown. In the second quarter of that game he grabbed a 76 yard pass. Defensively, Tony Stawarz has been picked by a number of pre-seasOn polls as an All American defensive back, despite the fact that he sat out last season with a knee injury. He was in on 99 tackles in two years and is on the punt return team. By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Assistant News Editor UM’s fall registration ran smoothly this week as 13,192 students were processed by 5:00 p.m. Wednesday. This number marks an increase over last fall’s 12,572 figure and it does not include graduate or in-service students who total about 5,000. “We’re a little ahead of last year when there were 18,026 students,” UM Registrar George Smith said. “I’ve predicted 18,500 for this year which is a slight increase.” Positiv l0» bow many 'urse-"buti vered thn GVen those "oba Ryt M ★ i Thun -Photo by MIKE NEFF the field and performed adequately. His first game was the third contest against LSU and though he played in only seven and a fraction games, he managed to shatter many passing records held by former U great George Mira. The Indiana Hoosier set a record for most touchdowns in a season (11), most passing yards in a game (343 against Houston), and most touchdown passes in a game (four against Houston). In the backfield are two running backs with breakaway potential, Tom “Silky” Sullivan and Chuck Foreman. Foreman may not start, however, due to a badly bruised ankle suffered in a scrimmage a week ago. Backing up Foreman will be Bobby Best who is in his fourth year in a UM jersey. Snaring Cochrane’s passes are two speedy ends with good pass catching ability. Don Brennan, a junior college transfer from Coffey- KELLY COCHRANE TOM SULLIVAN TONY STAWARZ These Men Can Help Put Her There Will CM Be at the Top of the Ratings? As 13,192 Register Enrollment Jumps |
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