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¡si on L?nthis suPerb q 53°|n any store ’I 17anrieVeSt'makJ 17 and givesy0u,,‘1 s °f incredibly^'- !)l uede, metaleye ^t0?’leatherN n beads, golden (J e instructions id % °f different desk e money-desig, ' vest that’s 1001 bvol m,n ,r|<fwomin: ' □ ni ,r»s « H □ri 37-42 ^ -Zip. TYPING 48-2152. ers typed torre - Experie Ars. Goodman Florida pory. jpeen the February and ¡demonstrations the government of Dade ■opted a similar ¡dealing with “the dis-[ofan educational in-h.” Students involved Hay demonstrations, e are subject to pros-i the Metro Court, Jian in the Criminal d typist. Excellent /ice. IBM Elec.lira dissertations, resumes, mist. A«] pi- ned] lent Stanford also ie recent adoption by 'ersity of new disci-procedures which t in a fair, but expe-learing of any charg-bythe administra-inst students, (proce-were not enforced S STENO & WOTÂPÏl] .Mile, # 208,2ndFlr.j nanuscripts, affidavits.t iplications, resumes,i) ¡-5585/226-3374, hat request by no means is the actions of the '.’’President Stanford 1,6 Executive Corn-look to the ad-lotion to bring through w established dis-procedures, charges “Pfiate against any ’as yet untried on t!es, who have vio-.university policy on ■;mbiy and demon- students fed ¡hH February sit-Jand convicted in ,Cn°Urt they would l°DSSt0fRthe^ ^an l «A m°nths in crf00 fine, and criminal records. ft,jhe students l!edrt0,be tried gLCarhng sted- ied to ry irial was fUl BakerminaI C°Urt pave ^ which was to I was lo„ vJaUdge Baker -fl Nation until ^»«ir invoIv«i MS“ °r ‘he [the Um t 6§al advi- !S of i,aw Sch001 ■^itig unH,e,changes won. ^ednes- Nchaei rvu I ^ornev^ of .» <£c3. o™ I the rrH OSTROFF , ,ive Committee £*ecU 4 of Trustees <1» Sta*e office to “roP V * St“det # .»1 *hlle' T ILt Febr»«'.s“- M„ d.mo.strat.0" Ashe Buiid^S- I , Henry King y\A he felt that the office would ^'request “serious U-” Iflt Stanford said fcommittee-s reasons U>t the charges 1 fr°m that the black stu-)lved in the Febru- istrations, would be riminal court while students involved ay demonstrations jot- eason for “this seem-| ¡„equitable treatment is the fact that nary the only law the ¡could be tried under statute which in criminal court ----- xUiorney, rup ^narges taw Vol. 46, No. 16 urrtran 284, Editorials in-depth story on S trial, see Page 5. Homecom By JOHN REILLY Of The Hurricane Staff A beautiful queen, a classic football game and a dance featuring The Association’ are all part of Update 70, this year’s UM Homecoming. Homecoming 1970 is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Class of 1930 — the first four-year graduating class. Some 30 men and women from the class of 1930 are expected to attend. Highlights of Homecoming Week, which starts Monday, include the coronation of the Homecoming Queen, the UM-Alabama football game, tapping for service and honor societies, an Alumni Update-Back-to-Class Program and the Hurricane Howl with touch football games and a barbecue. Some 3,000 UM alumni are expected to take part in Homecoming 1970. The special event for Homecoming is 70 Starts Mon. the “name the offspring contest.” Gertrude the Ibis is scheduled to hatch one of her eggs at the Homecoming game. Prize for the best name submitted, male or female, will be a portable TV donated by the Bookstore. Applications are available in the Bookstore and the Student Activities Office in the Student Union. Deadline for entering is 5 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 11. The winner will be announced at the Homecoming game when the egg is hatched. Here is the schedule for Homecoming 1970: MONDAY, NOV. 9 CORONATION OF THE HOMECOMING QUEEN on the patio of the Student Union at 7:30 p.m. TUES., NOV 10 ODK, national men’s leadership society, will tap new members from 8 a.m. to noon. HOMECOMING PARADE, 7:30 p.m., featuring bands, marching units and floats. Leaves University Drive-University Court area and follows University Drive to Ponce de Leon Blvd. North on Ponce to Miracle Mile and down the Mile to the judges’ stand at Coral Gables City Hall. WED., NOV. 11 NATIONAL ORDER OF OMEGA, recognition society for fraternity men, will tap new members from 8 a.m. until noon. OLD TIMERS REUNION, 6:30 p.m., at the home of President Henry King Stanford. THURS., NOV. 12 IRON ARROW, highest men’s honor society at UM, will tap new members from 8 p.m. until noon. At noon, the RE-DEDICA-TION OF THE ASHE ADMINISTRATION Continued On Page 3 Last Year’s Queen, Sabine Theodas . . . relinquishes reign, Monday night Due to ‘Unmanageable Crowds5 Stanford Forbids Ail UM Concerts Absence A meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees prevented —Photo By Al Sunshino several members of the Board from participating in Wednesday’s Academic Roundtable. But their absence did not prevent Dr. Shepard Faber of the Physical Science Department and several interested students and faculty members from getting to know one another. Says Improvement Needed Commission Examines UM Academic Climate CriminalVive istMH Court f .of theiernts w°uld «»I beline By JOHN REILLY Of The Hurricane Staff Academic climate, or how can UM improve the quality and character of its undergraduate programs, was the subject of the sixth open hearing of the Commission on Academic Goals Wednesday night. Dr. Roy Hensley, of the Economics Department, speaking before the commission said UM must be willing to pioneer new approaches in learning to boost the academic climate of UM. “We must re-orient students’ aspirations and teachers must inspire more academically demanding studies,” Hensley said. Hensley said any improvement of UM’s academic climate would take an increase of funds. / To improve the academic climate with UM’s existing facilities, Hensley said, UM is operating with too many students to achieve the correct academic climate. ence school must be healthy to insure an overall healthy academic climate. At UM it is not,” de Blij said. He suggested several things to improve climate at UM: proving mate: the academic cli- academic • Set up an office of public relations at UM to act as a safety valve to answer questions and to eliminate the non-recognition of superior faculty. • Have the Faculty Senate open to all faculty under renewable contracts for voting purposes. • Have the faculty protected for its politics by contracts and protected academically by tenure. Dr. Richard Rupp, asst, professor of English, also had several suggestions for im- • Re-defining the nature of tenure. • Reviewing tenure status for administrators holding faculty rank. • Establishing flexible options in grading. (Are grades necessary?) • Making greater use of junior-year-abroad programs. Ron deLans, USG secretary for academic affairs, suggested more strict enforcement of dormitory regulations to promote the academic climate by insuring longer quiet hours. Dean Harrison said the university must provide more opportunities like CAG for students and faculty to engage in stimulating discussions about UM. By IRIS HOROWITZ Of The Hurricane Staff President Henry King Stanford has banned all UM concerts from the soccer field and patio because of the “huge unmanageable crowds the concerts attract.” The three major problems that led to the president’s moratorium on concerts include “intolerable traffic and parking problems, injuries sustained and the violence and potential violence, and the massive, extensive drug and alcohol abuse. “The inadequate facilities and inability to restrict students poses a threat to the welfare of students and nonstudents, which leaves the university with an impossible responsibility,” Dr. Stanford said. He said although the legal liability may be great there is also a moral and ethical responsibility. “I’m not opposed to ‘rock’ music; I’m greatly concerned with the resulted enthusiasm which has developed into an apparently insoluable situation,” Dr. Stanford said. A USG Council and Student Entertainment Committee open meeting will be held today at noon to offer satisfactory alternatives. According to USG President Mark Krasnow, some of the alternatives to be presented will be to cancel the series completely; cancel all “rock” and “b i g name groups and offer only “folk” concerts which draw small crowds; move the concerts off campus to auditoriums or stadiums, with bus service furnished by USG; or to ignore the order and procede with the concerts as planned, which would probably lead to injunction and arrest of those involved in violation. “It is going to be a major policy decision whether to scrub the whole series, just move them off campus or make provisions,” Krasnow said. According to Director of Student Activities William Sheeder, the number of outsiders keeps escalating and the security force is not large enough to control the problem. Three of four students who were directly involved with injuries at last week’s “Canned Heat” concert, were from outside the university. Nine undercover agents discovered there was a wide range of narcotics readily ac- cessible on the soccer field at that concert. The crowd became hostile when a non-student was arrested because of his violation of three Coral Gables City ordinances including disrupting the peace, disorderly conduct, and obscenity. The unidentified non-student allegedly threatened with a gun, students in charge of the stage. Potential violence, such as German Shepard dogs both leashed and unleashed, firecrackers and flaming projectors, open sex, cleanup and noise also pose problems to the concert series. “I’m not sure the noise is as significant as many may think, because the complaints only come when the Continued On Page 7 —Photo by BUZZ BIRNBACH Ghosts of Rock Concerts Past Live .. . their presence haunts future concerts UM Hurricane Receives Highest Journalism Award The Miami Hurricane yesterday became one of the six American college newspapers to win the 1970 Pacemaker Award, the highest award for excellence in college journalism. The Pacemaker Award, which is given jointly by the American Newspaper Pub- “To improve academic cli-- ucW trial mate we must improve the leci'S Set’ should faculty-student relationship, 1116 to drop E)r. Sidney Besvinick, chairman of CAG, said. “The sooner faculty get back to teaching freshman courses and stop giving them to graduate assistants, the sooner academic climate will improve,” Dean John Harrison, of the Graduate School, said. "^ads ' APply iS' Äi Qldg. Off; ice in Dr. Harm de Blij, chairman of the Geography Department, said there is not one academic climate at UM but several. “The academic climate of any university’s ar^s and sci- Untenured Profs May Get Vote Dr. Sidney Besvinick •forcing division By LINDA ORMES Of The Hurricane Staff A “major request” to give non-tenured faculty the right to become voting members of the Faculty Senate is being acted upon now and should go into effect this spring, Dr. Sidney Besvinick, chairman of the Faculty Senate, said. This »request was one of 51 recommendations the ad hoc non-tenured committee drew up in a report submitted to the Faculty Senate last April. The 13 committee members were appointed by the former Senate Chairman, Dr. Carl McKenry, director of the Center for Urban Studies, to explore many facets of the university. The committee’s goal was to ‘provoke strong reactions to lead to constructive rhanee ” The chairman was James Mofsky, assistant professor oflaw. The committee’s recommendation to allow non-tenutred faculty to legislate in the Senate has been passed by the Faculty Senate, President Henry King Stanford and the Board of Trustees and now await faculty approval. Other recommendations have not been acted upon because, according to Besvinick, they should be resubmitted in a more detailed and legislative form. On the tenure issue, committee members urged that a teacher should be hired for three years and during that time should be evaluated. If he is not then given tenure, he should be given another two-year period for consideration. If not granted tenure, he should be given reasons why. As it stands now, a teacher is evaluated for tenvsre after seven years in most cases. If he is not granted tenure, he is fired, and the university doesn’t have to give him reasons. Continued On Page 7 ------------------------------v-------------- lishers’ Association and the Associated Collegiate Press was presented at the ACP Convention in Minneapolis. The six Pacemaker winners were selected in three categories: newspapers published at least twice weekly, of which the Hurricane was one of the two selected; newspapers published weekly or less, and junior college newspapers. The Hurricane received the Pacemaker in 1961 and 1963. The State News of Michigan State University, was co-winner in the category of papers published at least twice weekly, and has been the recipient of the award seven times previously. Of the two Pacemakers awarded to junior college papers, one went to another local paper, The Falcon Times of Miami-Dade Junior College North. The award was made for the Hurricanes published in the fall semester of 1969 and the spring of 1970, under the editorship of Larry H. Snyder. Earlier this year, the Hurricane was rated All-American by the Associated Collegiate Press for the second consecutive semester. ¡Î The Hurricane is now expanding its news service. Currently the paper is making newsreels of campus happenings that will be shown at university events and throughout the community. The Hurricane will also publish a new magazine supplement, The Hurricane EYE, which is due to be printed this month. The EYE will feature in-depth stories, fashion news, and human interest stories with colorful pictures and art work. No ’Cane Tuesday The Hurricane won’t be on the stands on Tuesday because a delegation of staffers has traveled to Minnesota attend a National College Newspaper Convention. More than 700 colleges and universities will be represented at the weekend convention. The ’Cane is one of six college newspapers to receive the Pacemaker Award. You can pick up the paper again next Friday.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, November 6, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-11-06 |
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_19701106 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19701106 |
Digital ID | mhc_19701106_001 |
Full Text |
¡si on
L?nthis suPerb q 53°|n any store ’I
17anrieVeSt'makJ 17 and givesy0u,,‘1
s °f incredibly^'- !)l
uede, metaleye
^t0?’leatherN
n beads, golden (J
e instructions id %
°f different desk e money-desig,
' vest that’s 1001
bvol
m,n ,r| |
Archive | mhc_19701106_001.tif |
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