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0rk in bear I lmes- pbi > J w°n by ace cws 111 beCphlavPi0l>¡ ^ber 3,5;J :iE HWY. hopping ce*n. °f M cc,mpus ,,fy Natick Inn 3-FFER! d you get GARMENT mth EACH ■LEANING >RY SERVICE Soccer Field Concert jirouble from Cora| Gables city officials, ■ cO0-a he would know nothing definite until but sa|° jth president Henry King Stanford’s RV MELANI VAN PETTEN Dy of The Hurricane Staff . t of the Electric Pumpkin,” tomorrow "^Halloween concert, may be the last on-^inpus concert at UM. t rv of Entertainment Jim Yasser Secre Undergraduate Student Govern-*'arouncU Monday that there might be i over the concert series as a result of 0 t JabSet Wednesday. I ^he basic thesis is that this concert may , lost ” Yasser told the Hurricane Wed-I be % after the meeting. 06 °Th’e Santana concert attracted about \ „nn neoDle, and about 50 per cent of these 2°' non-students,” he said. “There was no ID 'vere. because we weren’t sure until the last ch te that we’d be having a concert, so we Jnut0 use security force to help set up the stage. : «consequently, there were a lot of under-Lover police there that we didn’t know about,” asser said. “They turned in many reports of people selling and using different tvpes of drugs. What really concerns us are the* reports of relatively “hard” stuff - especially acid, speed, and MDA. “Now this is complicated by the fact that there were about a dozen cases of overdose and freak-outs, including several 15 and 16-year-olds,” Yasser explained. “There was one 15-year-old high school girl, in particular, who freaked out very badly on acid and had to be taken to the hospital. The Coral Gables City Commission is very unhappy about this, and has been putting a lot of pressure on the administration to eliminate either the drugs or the concerts,” he said. “In fact, we thought at first that we’d have to cancel Canned Heat, but we’ve gotten sort of a reprieve. We expect about the same number of narcs at the Canned Heat concert as there were at Santana, because we’re going to have a sort of open ID check,” Yasser said. “If we have the same problems — especially with things like acid and speed, but grass and wine aren’t cool either — and especially if there are any freak-outs or overdoses, that’ll be the clincher. We’ll be forced to cancel the concert series completely. “Coral Gables will use very unsubtle political pressure on the administration and the trustees, and they’re very susceptible to that kind of thing,” Yasser said. “The university doesn’t want this to go to court. “The students at that concert are going to have to choose between music and dope,” Yasser stated. Another thing we have to worry about is the students’ cooperation about parking — like not on people’s front lawns. We may have to have this concert with full lights on, to diminish the use of drugs,” he added. In other business, five new members of the Election Commission were ratified by the council. They are Ray Badini, Gil Llano, Ray Duras, Trish Redmond and Nate Schmalo. Virginia Ward and Edgar Roberts were ratified as Supreme Court justices. Larry Land was approved for a position on the Appeals Board, Ray Badini for the Traffic Authority, and Norm Tappan was approved as secretary of Intercollegiate Affairs. Itinues age i Basketball strike con-For the story see 10. ratti Fans Await Concert on Union Patio ... will Gables force all of them to be there? itrrtraiu' Voi. 46, No. 14 Friday, October 30, 1970 284-4401 Editorials Eastern Airlines Boycott goes national. See Page 4. 5$ typing EXPERIENCED IYPIST-J •°rnell and MiamiU-J nd doctoratetheses-J rripts — Law - Electric^ - Walking distance-# \rs. Alpha Temeles Le*y. xperienced typist.Excel rompt service. IBM Elec ■ers, theses, dissertations,! ary drafts, resumes,ms.j ly home. 448-2152. UNREALj FREE Telegram Serviced oil! Anywhere in t and all U.S. Militarybt the world. Call FronkeliJ after 5 p.m. Sk ¡SU’ SITS. i» y“„ ufvt&i T8E imxlO iHTEWfife 4 HOTSt. ; V«SITV or mm * ¡DESTS Q» OCTOBER. V sT■ ïCARS BEFORE T»f. WVERS! *7; . ut I TO UO'N r F JKAE1Ä THE 5 t| J KHKAltV MSHWtfE» W tt. A»» C!?3 V rse emms. tm oí» XMummäB acce mz i r » - » i , SM , r V S «Í. O Î » * i * iLa&fri, « ... v<S, ij Imm Started Here vou agree that DANIlif'UM coed Carol Copland pauses to read a 3S would probably* marker designating the spot where the >atly from psychothenw nmiversity first opened in 1926. The mark-p him. Send $1 toNw^l nfs, P.O.Box0''"’®7 er, located at University Drive near Lejeune Road, is the newest of 18 placed by the Historical Association of Southern Florida to commemorate points of historical interest in Greater Miami. Miss Copland is a senior in Mass Communications. ami. >iggesl One: No Money iVERSITYOf OF MEDICINE iiatricre: OFFERS opportunity10 byJ0HN reilly etyando^ °» The Hurricane Staff file Commission on Aca-s# both mol*°^emic Goals was faced with 1 years of an Old nemesis Wednesday in their open hearing thougntS'’ 0n the ^ iue, insonir money, in concertto f will be «r I* ticipotioni"; pt confié f library is to provide irement*11^ P^s, periodicals and other SminuNf^jBterials in support of the « o*.*«» of the students and fac-at EM,” Dr. Archie Mc-•M ° director of libraries a lack of i“ Pe primary objective of la i:i_ . . . ®pen Door’ Wides •unseling rodents wanting to rap their personal prob- L 3JTay n0w call 2300 or go he Open Door,” apart-i ®>ent 2iy. r\ Open Door” is an ex-/^^ental service providing jB—nts with the opportuni- L °r c°nfidential personal - nseling in a more }nfor. atmosphere pother facet of “The Yobl;01'.’ is an extensive, yst 'Oriented referral y EP- "^is includes infor-®^h a and counseling in wuaacimg lu rjj dreas as draft, abortion, ecademics, and voca- Jnal Plann mg. Open Door dfed trom 7 will be -etA. ^ ■ p.m.-3 a.m. ^'ght by undergraduate graduate students sup-®nted by ,the services of .chologist when needed. said. “But the increase of the book budget has scarcely kept up with the rise in the cost of books.” Dr. McNeal said the greatest weakness of the library is the lack of financial support. Dr. McNeal said opening the stacks is not the answer to increasing the services of the library with the present funds. “Opening the stacks is not possible,” he said. “We would need more staff, more shelvers and more elevators to accommodate the traffic between floors and we just don’t have the money.” The library has received the same funding f°r the past two years but the cost of periodicals has risen about 15 per cent per year and the cost of books has risen six to eight percent. In answer to complaints about the library hours McNeal said the library is open 105 hours per week. This is exceeded by only f°ur schools in the South and then by only three hours. McNeal did say he would look into keeping the library open longer hours on Saturday and Sunday and possibly closing earlier on Friday. McNeal said the reason for the length of time it takes to get periodicals bound is the lack of binders in the Miami area. “The binder we use does good work but when copies of periodicals are mutilated they have jto be completed before they are bound and sent back to the library,’ Neal said. McNeal said departmental libraries are not the answer to the main library’s problems. “We are working for breadth and depth rather than duplication of materials. Departmental libraries don’t work out because of the short hours they keep and the lack of staff,” he said. Dr. Robert Kelley, chairman of the UM Library Advisory Committee, said it is the responsibility of students and faculty to promote the idea of a higher quality library and the fact that the library needs more funds. “The faculty of each individual department should study the departmental collection in the library and push for improvements,” he said. TV, “J don’t know if the Board of Trustees can do anything at this time. All the Board can do is try to get the charges dropped.” — Dr. Sidney Besvinick, Chairman of the Faculty Senate ‘Drop Sit-in Charges’ Faculty Urges Trustees oals Commission TV 01 F ? hoblems of UM Library lityto? %/ i K,, lAithi , _*j i-nvooca nf tko «¡put Hack to the librarv.” Mc- By JOHN REILLY Of The Hurricane Staff The Faculty Senate has passed a resolution requesting the UM Board of Trustees to use all possible efforts to have the charges against students involved in the February sit-in of the Financial Aid office, currently pending in criminal court, to be dropped. During the summer, the Board of Trustees, feeling the university proceedings against the students were going too slowly asked President Henry King Stanford to provide information to the state attorney’s office concerning the sit-in. “I don’t know if the Board of Trustees can do anything at this time,” Dr. Sidney L. Besvinick, chairman of the Faculty Senate, said. “All the Board can do is try to get the charges dropped.” Miss Minette Massey of the law school said this resolution may or may not get the students off the hook, depending upon the disposition of the state attorney’s office. “I certainly think the resolution is a wholesome thing,” she said. The students charged with the February sit-in will be tried in criminal court while the students charged with Continued On Page 3 iillliiiii; I i: • ■ : —Photo by JOSHUA SILLS Capt. Wm. Guthrie Debates Eastern’s Bruce McMorgan ... both discuss airline’s stand ignoring ecology Gadflies’ Forum Airs ‘Guthrie Vs. Eastern’ By IRIS HOROWITZ Of The Hurricane Staff “If as a 30-year employee, blue-suit, homeowner, square as hell, earning 37 grand a year ... I couldn’t get the ear of the Eastern administration, what chance do YOU have to get their ear?” Captain William Guthrie, former Eastern Airlines pilot, said at a meeting of the Gadflies Tuesday night. Guthrie was fired by Eastern last week because he insisted on draining excess jet fuel from the engines before takeoff instead of allowing one gallon of kerosene per aircraft to be dumped into the air after takeoff. According to Guthrie, it Student Union Fills Staff Void Joyce Knox . . . new associate Mrs. Joyce Knox, an attractive 24-year-old with a Master’s degree in sociology, has been named associate director of the Student Union. Mrs. Knox replaces Chester Byrd who resigned this summer. “I haven’t been here long enough to decipher the needs of the students but as I meet more students and work with them, it will become evident what the students want,” Mrs. Knox said. Mrs. Knox’s duties include: advising several student organizations, general public relations work for the Union and general administrative tasks. “When I am here a little bit longer I think my responsibilities will be more defined,” Mrs. Knox said. Mrs. Knox believes her job will change from that of Chester Byrd’s. “When Mr. Byrd was here, he became the spokesman for all the black students on campus. With me I don’t think that will happen since there are more black administrators on campus now,” she said. “I am advisor to the United Black Students but also to UBOG and other groups.” Mrs. Knox said she applied for the associate director’s job because there is not much to do with an MA in Sociology except poverty work, government work or teaching. wasn’t an immediate decision to stop dumping. Discussion has been underway for eight years. “I’ve been trying long and diligently to get the procedure changed,” he said. “The drain can is just a small incident in a much larger misunderstanding.” Bruce Mcivrorgan, Eastern’s representative at the Gadfly session, was unable to comment on the problem because being employed “a little over a week” gave him little knowledge or authority on the situation. “I regret that the company did not see fit to bring a PR man or someone conversant with technical matters, but I’m glad to see so many interested students,” Guthrie said. “There are so many vice presidents running around at the new Eastern building on LeJeune Road that they’re bumping into each other. They have spare tools, spare tires, spare pilots, why didn’t they have enough regard for a group of interested Continued S.i Page 3 AWS Proposes Extension By KAREN KAGAN Hurricana Reporter AWS Central Council voted Tuesday to accept a proposal extending late minutes for first-semester freshmen from 15 minutes to one hour per semester. The 45-minute extension is designed to cover any emergencies which might cause a girl to break her curfew. Backers of the proposal feel the present allowance of 15 minutes does not provide adequate time to deal with emergency situations. The AWS Rules Revision Committee will submit the proposal to the Dean of Women for further action. If accepted by the Dean of Women, the proposal, which constitutes only a minor change in policy, will become effective immediately. The Rules Revision Committee is also investigating the possibility of extending visitation in men’s residence areas from 12 hours to 24 hours a day. This, if accepted, would not be effective until next semester. The Central Council agreed to pledge $60 toward the newly-organized Campus Crisis Center, called “The Open Door.” Individual Halls Councils may vote to donate additional money to the center. The Crisis Center will provide emergency service to both university students and the surrounding community on a professional level. The specially-trained 42-member staff will eventually provide 24-hour assistance to anyone in an emergency situation or to anybody wanting to just talk with someone. AWS President Nancy Handler also announced plans for two upcoming campus guest speakers. Ti-Grace Atkinson, a radical feminist, will speak on Women’s Liberation Wednesday, November 4, at 8 p.m. in the 1968 Auditorium. Bill Baird, instrumental in revising abortion laws, will speak on abortion reforms Wednesday, December S.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 30, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-10-30 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (12 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_19701030 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19701030 |
Digital ID | mhc_19701030_001 |
Full Text |
0rk in bear I lmes- pbi > J
w°n by
ace cws
111 beCphlavPi0l>¡ ^ber 3,5;J
:iE HWY.
hopping ce*n.
°f M cc,mpus ,,fy Natick Inn
3-FFER!
d you get
GARMENT mth EACH ■LEANING
>RY SERVICE
Soccer Field Concert
jirouble from Cora| Gables city officials, ■ cO0-a he would know nothing definite until but sa|° jth president Henry King Stanford’s
RV MELANI VAN PETTEN
Dy of The Hurricane Staff
. t of the Electric Pumpkin,” tomorrow "^Halloween concert, may be the last on-^inpus concert at UM.
t rv of Entertainment Jim Yasser Secre Undergraduate Student Govern-*'arouncU Monday that there might be i over the concert series as a result of
0 t
JabSet Wednesday.
I ^he basic thesis is that this concert may , lost ” Yasser told the Hurricane Wed-I be % after the meeting.
06 °Th’e Santana concert attracted about \ „nn neoDle, and about 50 per cent of these 2°' non-students,” he said. “There was no ID 'vere. because we weren’t sure until the last ch te that we’d be having a concert, so we Jnut0 use security force to help set up the
stage.
: «consequently, there were a lot of under-Lover police there that we didn’t know about,”
asser said. “They turned in many reports of people selling and using different tvpes of drugs. What really concerns us are the* reports of relatively “hard” stuff - especially acid, speed, and MDA.
“Now this is complicated by the fact that there were about a dozen cases of overdose and freak-outs, including several 15 and 16-year-olds,” Yasser explained. “There was one 15-year-old high school girl, in particular, who freaked out very badly on acid and had to be taken to the hospital.
The Coral Gables City Commission is very unhappy about this, and has been putting a lot of pressure on the administration to eliminate either the drugs or the concerts,” he said. “In fact, we thought at first that we’d have to cancel Canned Heat, but we’ve gotten sort of a reprieve.
We expect about the same number of narcs at the Canned Heat concert as there were at Santana, because we’re going to have a sort of open ID check,” Yasser said. “If we have the same problems — especially with things like acid and speed, but grass and wine aren’t cool either — and especially if there are
any freak-outs or overdoses, that’ll be the clincher. We’ll be forced to cancel the concert series completely.
“Coral Gables will use very unsubtle political pressure on the administration and the trustees, and they’re very susceptible to that kind of thing,” Yasser said. “The university doesn’t want this to go to court.
“The students at that concert are going to have to choose between music and dope,” Yasser stated.
Another thing we have to worry about is the students’ cooperation about parking — like not on people’s front lawns. We may have to have this concert with full lights on, to diminish the use of drugs,” he added.
In other business, five new members of the Election Commission were ratified by the council. They are Ray Badini, Gil Llano, Ray Duras, Trish Redmond and Nate Schmalo.
Virginia Ward and Edgar Roberts were ratified as Supreme Court justices. Larry Land was approved for a position on the Appeals Board, Ray Badini for the Traffic Authority, and Norm Tappan was approved as secretary of Intercollegiate Affairs.
Itinues
age
i Basketball strike con-For the story see
10.
ratti
Fans Await Concert on Union Patio
... will Gables force all of them to be there?
itrrtraiu'
Voi. 46, No. 14
Friday, October 30, 1970
284-4401
Editorials
Eastern Airlines Boycott goes national. See Page 4.
5$
typing
EXPERIENCED IYPIST-J •°rnell and MiamiU-J nd doctoratetheses-J rripts — Law - Electric^ - Walking distance-# \rs. Alpha Temeles Le*y.
xperienced typist.Excel rompt service. IBM Elec ■ers, theses, dissertations,! ary drafts, resumes,ms.j ly home. 448-2152.
UNREALj
FREE Telegram Serviced oil! Anywhere in t and all U.S. Militarybt the world. Call FronkeliJ after 5 p.m.
Sk
¡SU’ SITS. i» y“„ ufvt&i T8E imxlO iHTEWfife 4 HOTSt. ;
V«SITV or mm *
¡DESTS Q» OCTOBER.
V sT■ ïCARS BEFORE T»f. WVERS! *7; .
ut I TO UO'N r F JKAE1Ä THE 5 t| J KHKAltV MSHWtfE» W tt. A»» C!?3 V
rse emms. tm oí» XMummäB
acce mz i r » - » i
, SM , r V S «Í. O Î »
* i * iLa&fri,
«
... v |
Archive | mhc_19701030_001.tif |
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