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Cracks Down on Kent mm 'irr GF M Voi. 46, No. 11 r4 )ury « t jf';iari*tions °" f.¡alilgua rtsm™ I *eir '«cere belief and HïSS» whi<* ■ <>'“logically “>“sed have °fe that they •£V- bo<iny injury had they not done so. The grand jury’s findings were termed “inconsistent with the facts” presented to the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest,” according to commission member and New Haven, Conn. Police Chief James F. Ahern. The father of slain student eW SBG Const, olishes SAFAC MADS AND ÎE FAMOUS (tv JOHN Rf:|L,-V „jisISHWOWIT2 The Hurricane Staff ient Activity Fee Committee s voted recognize, as 0 c a t i ° n fD«2»lr8 e»— a Finance Le, chosen in the SPECIAL PRICiS I for CHILDREN iSl Sheeder ‘doubts authority’ eace Fest eld Next TYPING |By ALICE HENNE Of The Hurricane Staff ers typed corre pjans are being made enced — Proi»pl-§L,, „ . , _ _ 444.)29] «UM peace festival Oct. raise funds for ICED TYPIST nd Miaml’U-Hl infs awaiting seven trial for na miamiu-™ o ----- ---- orate theses-®rt in last February’s Law — Electric tyt tec Black Students sit-in. ig distance — i Temeles Levy. I “e for Jhe festiv^ Peace For Justice.” UNREAL ......... ■^wal rock groups are rgram Services ig ¡nvited t() ^ festjval> rhere in the US sibilities are, “Sweet l. s. Military boitif” “Bethlehem Asy-j. Coll Frankodl and the “Goldrush” m. .perform. s the Princess^B Ääif‘i*tions 4.00 an hour. for are being “Illusion” and event will be held at Bock or on the soccer iVeTsTty o: groupndin§ °n the size of of medicine nr HIATRIC RESEA' loney collected will help , t0,J°,r the students’ legal opportunity top-lcehng if charges ortont develop1"*™' are up- arogram inre5 ety and o«h*W charges are dropped I 136 USed ^0r a ,$'b0,hn’° ili°°rshiP funcl or a l years of age* I defense fund. -........is a joint ef- ,,h0U9h,S' . and UBS t0 “cre- ,ue, insomn'«;1' MDhc awareness and iroi^Pmton” and tQ raise dt-Ffy for those in concen will be cor»" ticiP°'ioni" Île blacks on trial. pt confide"1'0 j, . CKs and two whites ,irementwi||l*®i.n8 a November 5 5 minutes a 'L. Is the first time k period, EL.„.®nd blacks have a, com‘ 9 A.M. on« the rry Gorde, one qh FridotA^ ’-ace F0r I(’'°rdlnatorS Of stlce”said- irnote w Qjt'Jso, ^ Tc0IImH been hW,° persons who nth. Coil ». . n he]ping thp l49K^tem.C-e they share 2 b"' and lancV n Sl°r of law and fefestivifby’ wil1 sPeak. Oct 2^ Wl" Start at 12 grouns ,?nd last until WPS have finished were stu- died Minnette manner specified in the new Student Body Government (SBG) Constitution.” According to the new SBG Constitution, the Finance Committee will have the authority “to review and govern the expenditures of all funds derived from the student activity fees.” The SAFAC Screening Committee has the authority to select SAFAC members from among qualified students. “We are allowing student government to choose the students that will serve on the Finance Committee and then we will approve these selections,” Mark Krasnow, USG President and Screening Committee chairman said. Krasnow said the Finance Committee and SAFAC are one and the same. The Finance Committee will be a permanent agency of the Student Senate as stated in the constitution. “The Finance Committee will be selected from student government by student government and will number seven students,” committeeman Jim Yasser said. But William Sheeder, director of Student Activities and a member of the Screening Committee, doubts its authority to delegate the authority of SAFAC to USG. “I feel the Screening Committee is changing the structure of SAFAC and I don’t know who has the authority to approve of this,” he said. Sheeder said the Finance Committee could start meeting and pass recommendations as to how the student activity fee should be spent. “But I don’t know if these recommendations would be followed,” he said. Also the summer SAFAC has returned $2,600 to the USG Concert Series which was allocated last year but not received due to error. Yasser pointed out it would be unfair to penalize this year’s entertainment committee for last year’s error. Therefore, the money was taken from the 70-71 contingency fund. Summer SAFAC also decided to carry over $13,000 allocated last year for the resurfacing of the intramural basketball, volleyball and tennis courts. “William McLaughlin, UM Business Manager, said that if SAFAC would allocate half the cost of resurfacing, he would present it to the budget committee and indicate a favorable response,” Sheeder said. SAFAC voted down a proposal to reserve $5,000 more toward resurfacing, which would be a total of $18,0 or half of the total cost of the job. 's 'Cane n will ^ , 660-50^ were ' n > .......... n CO' of Yog lueezer” Tampa routs Miami 31-14 Fri-1 ,e Orange Bowl. Story, page 8. re'iew of the Santana concert turn to page 6. p» j leliM's,*d tollman questions the relevancy °arfl of Trustees on page 5. *au. 9 4 8 4 5 *41 ts" >nt ' Matusow Santos Sports Walters Wollman tant AP*» a gra tice to the e an it rr traue Tuesday, October 20, 1970 Jeffrey Miller, Bernard Miller, said, “You mean you can get away with murder in this country? This is murder.” . * have lost faith in justice l” u America>” said Martin ^cheuer, whose 20 year-old-aughter Sandy was also killed. “We believe our allegations will support the find- ings of the U.S. Department of Justice . . . rather than the findings of the Portage County Court,” Arthur Krause, father of Allison Krause said. For the reaction of the university community to the grand jury’s findings, the ’CANE contacted the managing editor of the “Daily Kent Stater,” Jim Nichols. “There are about 15,000 students that left this weekend,” Nichols said. “A lot of people are pretty scared.” Nichols said radical Weatherman leader Berna-dine Dorhn had included Kent State in a list of places she said would be bombed. Nichols said a bomb scare in Taylor Hall on Friday and the results of the grand jury’s report had increased apprehension on the campus that there will be bombings. “There are cops crawling all over this campus,” he said, “but they’re not effec- 284-4401 tive and they’re not efficient . . . Taylor Hall was left unlocked the night of the bomb threat.” • Nichols said he thought the majority of the university community considered the jury’s report “a whitewash . . . The report is ridiculous. “The faculty thinks the Kent State President Robert White went on closed circuit campus television Friday afternoon and told listeners, “We have long known that the grand jutry report would create problems.” He went on to assure the 25 unidentified defendants of “full judicial process. I am sure that every legal safeguard will be observed.” Nichols characterized the Kent student body as mostly “apathetic . . . but what political feeling there is, is liberal. “Bombing is the last thing anyone wants to see here. Even the Yippies here are dead set against it.” —Photo By MIKE GARRETT Jail Wilder Turns Over Reign .. . last year’s queen crowns ’70 queen ’70 Spirit Queen, Ex-Playboy Bunny By LINDA ORMES Of The Hurricane Staff “They called my name at the Pep Rally but I didn’t even know I was Spirit Queen,” Laurie Gordon, UM junior from New York said. Miss Gordon, who represented the apartment area in the Queen’s contest said she is really proud to represent the university as Spirit Queen, and “I don’t think the rumors about UM not having spirit are true.” An education major who hopes to go to law school, Miss Gordon worked as a Playboy Bunny in the New York Playboy Club this summer. She has also done show-room modeling for Oscar de la Renta bathing suits in New York. She said that she did enjoy modeling but prefers to go into a more secure job and knows that she could always fall back on teaching drama. She started at the university two years ago as a drama major but never tried out for the Ring Theatre. “I couldn’t see being an actress,” she said, “education is much more practical.” Miss Gordon was house governor of her house in the 1968 Dorm and was voted Campus Queen of the Month by CAMPUS WORLD, former resident student publication. She said she is really pleased with the facilities at UM and that extra-curricular activities have a lot to offer the students. Laurie represented Apartment 25 in the apartment preliminaries. She then went on to the finals where she was selected from a field of 38 girls. + + + At Supervisedtu tu-lions Trustees Consider Campus Drinking ZBT Captures Overall Spirit Week Trophy By JOHN REILLY Of The Hurricane Staff Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, in winning the car parade, the Hurricane Howl and the Mystery Event, has captured the overall trophy for Spirit Week 1970. In the Independent division, Pierce House was first, Hoover House was second and McKinley House third. Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity placed first in the Fraternity division with Pi Kappa Alpha second and Alpha Tau Omega third. Delta Delta Delta sorc«rity won the Sorority division trophy with Delta Zeta taking second and Phi Sigma Sigma third. The High Spirit award, which goes to the organization excellent in Spirit Week events and showing superior spirit went to Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. The Hurricane asked Gary Reinhardt, Spirit Week chairman, what Happened to f.r.rs. “jimmy Fleming went into the stands to get two ZUM ZUM men and two orange hats to start a Yamma Yamma cheer. Meanwhile, the 40 organizational chairmen were supposed to encourage their groups to start cheering. But we were losing 14-0 at this point and the fans couldn’t get their spirit up, Reinhardt said. Reinhardt also said he realized that the students were not in the mood to cheer after the ’Canes started to lose but they shouldn’t have booed. By PAT DUARTE Of The Hurricane Staff Proposals to allow supervised drinking on campus and to “insure the continued health and existence of the UM fraternity system” are presently under consideration by the Student Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees. The proposals were presented Thursday by two subcommittees made up of administrators and representatives of major student organizations. The first proposal advocates chaperoned drinking at “registered” functions in specified areas of the campus. Inter-Fraternity Council President Ron Stone, a member of both subcommittees, said he would “continue sitting on committees for revision of this thing until it is passed by the trustees.” Stone said IFC originated thé proposal last spring. First it intended to provide for drinking at fraternity functions only. It was later expanded to include other campus groups at the request of USG President Mark Krasnow. A University-wide alcoholic revisions committee was then formed ,and submitted its recommendations to the Vice President for Student Affairs who forwarded the proposal to the Board of Trustees. If the trustees accept the committee’s proposal, drinking will be allowed at registered social functions in the Student Union, residence areas, fraternity houses and panhellenic suites. The second proposal before the board said that, since fraternities supplement the housing program and are generally useful to UM, they should get the same services as the residence halls. “Because the university is able to place restrictions on the fraternities just as in the residence halls, fraternities should get some support from the university in areas where they need it,” Stone said. Stone noted that fraternities, despite being subject to UM restrictions, are also self-supporting. He said the Fraternity Relation Subcommittee’s func- tion was to “set up a work- olas Gennett, who chaired The next meeting of the ing relationship between the both subcommittees, specu- student Affairs Committee fraternities and UM,” since it lated that the fraternity rela- , _ , „ _ was recently discovered tions proposal might pass of the Board of Trustees will “there is none.” more easily than the alcohol- be 0°*- 29. I he trustees an- ics revision proposal, since it swers to both proposals will Dean of Students Dr. Nich- was “less controversial.” be known then. The ‘Rock’ Is Symbolic With Free Expression . . . will new policies limit this? HKS Wants Guidelines In Use of ‘The Rock5 Bv BARBARA KERR Of The Hurricane Staff President Henry King Stanford has requested that the Union Board of Governors establish guidelines for the use of the Rock. UBOG has formed a study group to consider this request, but last Wednesday UBOG reaffirmed its position of last spring to leave the Rock as a platform of expression for the students. In recent years, the Rock has served as the major campus location for peaceful demonstrations. Last year it was the scene of the Moratorium demonstration and the United Black Students demonstration. Last May after Kent State, Dr. Stanford said students should conduct themselves in the “spirit of the Rock” which was dedicated to “free discussion and peaceful dissent. “It is a sad day in the history of American colleges, when their campuses, which should be the forum for free discussion, even peaceful dissent, should degenerate into open warfare, regardless of the provocations,” said President Henry King Stanford. The administration began to think in terms of establishing guidelines for the Rock after a carillon concert was disturbed last year by a ’ love-in at the Rock at the same time. “The loud, amplified music from the love-in grossly interfered with the carillon,” said Donald Kubit, assistant to Dr. William Butler, vice president for student affairs. Kubit said the president’s office received complaints about the rock music interfering with the university scheduled carillon concert and wanted to know who had jurisdiction over the Rock. The request for guidelines was brought before UBOG last semester by Dr. Butler. At that time, UBOG didn’t think it was appropriate to establish rules for governing the use of the Rock. UM Student Arrested Environment! Hands Out Literature . . . moments before arrest By MELANI VAN PETTEN Of The Hurricane Staff Ten members of UM’s Environment! were ordered to leave Miami International Airport Saturday, and when they failed to do so, one was arrested. Martin Wolterding, a graduate student, was charged with “distributing handbills without a written permit” and “failure to obey a direct order of a police officer.” He was later released on $125 bond. The handbills in question contained information concerning Miami Beach’s sewage disposal system which was directed at incoming tourists. The leaflets explained that 40 million gallons of raw sewage are dumped into the ocean each day through a 12,000 foot pipeline. The raw sewage is occasionally washed back to the beach area, creating unhealthy swimming conditions. “Please, for your own sake, consider this information seriously,” it stated. “This is your city too because Miami Beach depends upon tourist business in order to sustain itself. The decision is clearly yours.” The students distributed this informa- tion to people coming out of the baggage areas for about 25 minutes before a Dade County police officer informed them that they had to have a written* permit from the Dade County Port Authority before they could distribute handbills at the airport. Wolterding disagreed with the officer, pointing out that a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision stated that permits to distribute literature were not necessary in certain parts of quasi-public areas such as bus terminals, train stations and airports, even though the facility is privately owned. When he continued to distribute the leaflets, he was arrested. “I don’t care about the Constitution of the United States,” Edward Hammond of the Port Authority said, when Wolterding quoted the decision and his Constitutional rights. “I care about Port Authority rules. If you disagree with the rule, get a lawyer and do it the right way.” “We’ve had this law challenged by every union that does business here,” Hammond told the students. “It’s been upheld all the way to the Florida Supreme Court.”
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 20, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-10-20 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (10 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_19701020 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19701020 |
Digital ID | mhc_19701020_001 |
Full Text |
Cracks Down on Kent
mm
'irr
GF M
Voi. 46, No. 11
r4 )ury « t
jf';iari*tions °"
f.¡alilgua rtsm™
I *eir '«cere belief and
HïSS» whi<*
■ <>'“logically “>“sed have °fe that they
•£V- bo |
Archive | mhc_19701020_001.tif |
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