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Fri.. inor Disciplinary Hearings Go Into Effect Lincoin ar âs Washiil-! Vans« ,m§ton rei' 3.1 Truman 3 S «luì Garf; Roosi eveit 2. gating pf System mm HaM]„8 ¡ î I Tyler 2.n 1 .,NDA ORMES Vol. 46, No. 13 urnraiu' Editorials Should the Student Ache abolished? ■Ä’S-S« 'J&jzsr* Tuesday, October 27, 1970 284-4401 f N°vl ember the IP «““‘td Will •“SU" ■»i"or in- hoard is made up of b° three girls, ^r'studenth0Vs. The board ?»1D^F«re^ele_e.!dJrom AYS 5 NIGHTLY id Carved!) 1 Chicken 11 E*® fin students by the mfand Review Com- ^Minor Discipline jj by student John S. Le initiating a brand <linGSalaou vstem, and I’m happy H WE are famous E» Pike said, “but we ,E ADDED spS. ¿Ve to feel 11 out ~ ba the selection Review tee for any changes dures.” STSra SIRL0InSTEak 1 worked this summer LEnF TIPS IN ¿mTReview Committee BROMFhN'*N^Ew up'll'R1 a l*nal R”1" S S a combined ef- n( proposals from Resident Development, «1 deans, Associated Students and Men’s »«^rMAssociatio"- BARBECUEofprB Panels wil1 meet t?re6 each week to hear infractions of visita-■drinking, bookstore I improper use of vehi-on campus and minor F PII —Photo By KEN RATKIEWICZ urday uoôô# speciali FORCHI! fion. will decide punish- Students Supported Students at ‘Seventh Day Festival for Justice’ ... bands donated time to aid USG-UBS defense fund collection Zs which will be primantes and revocation of ¡ges. The boards have ower to suspend a stu- e said that in order to before a board, a stu-must be charged by a resident or a personnel A resident advisor can-large a violator, he can report him. By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Assistant News Editor TYPliudent who appears be-« board does not have a Term papers typed 1X0 counsel; he must de retarial Service-Hijiniself. a page. appeal a case, the stu- ■nay go before the Ap- UNRE1? Board which consists ........7 students and the Dean FREE Telegram Ser» 'dents °H! Anywhere mill,I said there is a large ond all u.S. Million® of cases from the the world. Coll fra-of school. These cases ofter 5 p.m. been handled by the offices for the last Jhths. sure this year’s sys-11 be far more success-said. “It’s got to use last year’s was a Find out what hot will be . .. At the " Thursday, Oct. 29. Roses are red, VioleV Believe it or not Bozo's a Jew.. Thousands of students attended an all day peace festival Sunday at the Rock held to benefit seven UM students who will be tried on November 5 for their alledged participation in last spring’s sit-in demonstrations. The concert, “The Seventh Day Festival for Justice,” was sponsored jointly by Undergraduate Student Government and United Black Students. “Illusion,” “Fantasy,” “Bethlehem Asylum,” “Gold Rush,” “Sweet Basil,” “Wormwood” and several other groups donated their services to the Festival and admission was free. Listeners, however, were asked to donate whatever they could to a legal defense fund, the first recipients of which will be the seven students. Festival coordinators Steve Chaykin, Jerry Gorde, and Jeff Wollman, estimate that close to $1000 was raised and that at least 5,000 persons attended the event. “This is one of the first times that any group of UM students has really gotten together,” Chaykin said. “Everything’s been peaceful. We haven’t had any trouble whatsoever.” The coordinators also said that everyone but certain Student Union officials had been cooperative. “The participation of students and the community have proven that the seven students no longer stand alone.” Gorde said. Mystic Eve Thursday nite.Or . . . Thursday nile,• W/Oals Lommittee “For the first time the students picked up the mess. We didn’t have to clean up any garbage. The audience even took down the stage for us,” Chaykin said. HE UNIVERS j SCHOOL OF MEOW OF PSYCHIATRIC OFFE«« A unique opp°'r' in on importent*'“? JOHN REILLY 'I1« Hurricane Staff robes Library The coordinators said that they would particularly like to thank Irwin Elleren, Jack LaMont, “Jeff” and several other people who provided the Festival with equipment at the last minute. —Photo By KEN RATKIEWICZ People Grooved To The Music . .. coordinators estimate $1,000 raised ,. „ „.„aror F "" "“mean* staff dication prog™ ... . ........... t^niicanis boiR,;!˰ make recommenda- n,PL. 21 C,oinmission on ». ---* ÖLU- and faculty an oppor- JH mol/rv _________ t at lead 21 Y«"' !mi c c*,°r „„vousÆ boals> °ne lmpor- rientVvethouä^'fc j6 1S emer§ing; StU- repS I t faculty are finding nn ,0T ' ■ togs about UM they Besvinick said CAG will look into the kinds of services the library provides, the adequacy of the library’s holdings, and the procedures that the library uses. “The “Seventh Day” was just the beginning. It’s part of a new cultural revolution that has just come to Miami,” Gorde said. bers themselves, they enthusiastically agreed to attend. was, and we told them to sit down and enjoy the music,” Gorde said. sion difficulty-in cor:' klj^ •h k. keoi«1'1'I .ot CAG* stressed will be ke” .J point mS //5 mii'ull|!l/^e balf-way point in * .*? of open hearings, as the CAG four week Pf,lC Reek. Library will be the CAG’s fifth Other areas to be explored include what departments of UM are not adequately represented in the library and what can be done to correct it. Besides speaking on the weaknesses and changes for the library, invited speakers will discuss: Gorde also said that when the coordinators originally approached the managers of the different groups they were refused, but when they approached the group mem- “Members of ‘Illusion’ told us that of all the Florida audiences they’d played to, this was the best and most responsive,” Wollman said. “We had a security system of student marshalls, but after the first half hour we saw how peaceful everything “The Festival coordinators will take a student opinion on Thursday and Friday of this week which would determine student’s reaction to the Festival, the sponsoring of it by USG, and the situa-t i o n which now plagues seven students,” Gorde said. daythroug^Wi;;7uc s rlIln ____3r ng tomorrow night Needed despe p.m. in the Flamingo ..^mote^1' 30tn Of tho Cti.Hont • How the library can be made more useful. rooim.i own rooiMi 665-8bearing has generat-wa„° 77wYERORLAW Won, , erest ln Pe°Ple } d brother iM«]* 01 to offer sugges-fendb . ml *nd comments about ■free fu. _ chargé l*- ^nrnents about hea7 chonc* |ces the library offers bread'n.'-r*hat they think it u i V"' "ñat they th out he P' y ’ Besvinick said. olution thenY ^ • What materials, other than books, would be desirable to have in the library. • How complete the library’s holdings for research interests are. • Should the library’s hours be extended? • What innovations could be used in the library? Santos if you spy^yj want to need help * x 3959 or*“1 I ■bo<‘ WVUM Besvinick said that although the library contains approximately one million volumes, about 20 per cent of them are in a foreign lan- guage. ttoversiâi ‘CANE col-■ Daniel Santos and Femole to N‘'aniel Santos and win Äisher Larfy “This is a large percentage of books that the majority of can not use,” he Wonted ^„/»tonight. 'IL, 1 Le the guests on :05 - 3ck LaMont show )s Was asked to be a *fhter WVUM listeners vjl station last week TO°n to his column, iT1'1 Hippies Is 8 Delight.” wil1 sPeak " Jy Under§round press » mer edlt°r of the Hur- GOdXfoa l0t, 0f phone iftp pantos’ article on L'PPies,” LaMont (Up ,,s why we got him source within y°u gnet0ie\< Hand- F ¡/ , rising ,- 9 * ding " e«1 students said. Speaking before the commission tomorrow night will be: Dr. Archie McNeal, director of libraries; Dr. Gilbert Voss, chairman of the Division of Marine Biology of RSMAS; Bob Sherman of the Graduate Student’s Association. Also appearing will be: Ur. Robert Kelley, Asst. Prof, of Mathematics and Dr. Oscar Owre, professor of biology. All students, faculty and administrators who have ideas on the improvement ot the library are urged to attend the open hearing. UM Ecology Advocates Promote Eastern Boycott By MELANI VAN PETTEN Of The Hurricane Staff Biiiiiiwmromiffl ★ ★ i*iiiiiiiiii About a dozen members of the UM Gadflies and Environment! took positions in front of the Ashe Building Friday, distributing leaflets and petitions calling for a boycott of Eastern Airlines. Captain W. L. Guthrie, former Eastern Airlines pilot, and a representative of Eastern Airlines will be on campus tonight for a forum sponsored by the Gadflies. The confrontation will take place at 8 p.m. in the International Lounge. The boycott was called because of the airline’s recent dismissal of Captain W. L. Guthrie, a pilot with 30 years’ experience, for allegedly delaying flights by draining excess kerosene from the engine of his plane before take-off. ■iimimiimmiiiiii ★ ★ sum Guthrie has protested this practice of Eastern for years and every other airline of dumping the kerosene into the air after take-off. flies and Environment! calls for a boycott of Eastern until the company adopts a policy of draining off the kerosene before take-off, and until Guthrie is rehired. Guthrie has said that he will not take his job back until the policy is adopted. “When one considers that nearly 800 to 1,000 planes (at ll/2 to 4 gallons each) do this daily, one can see that it becomes a major contributor to pollution,” the Gadflies stated in their leaflet. “This kerosene obscures the vision of the pilots, it deposits itself on windshields, not merely of the planes that take off behind one another, but also on the passing motor vehicles and those vehicles parked at the airport.” The process of draining the kerosene before take-off takes about five to 10 minutes. “We’ve only been here two hours, and already we’ve got hundreds of signatures,” Gadfly chairman Rocky Walters said. “People seem to be generally aware of what’s going on. “Here’s where the students really have power,” Walters said. “Literally thousands of students fly during vacations and on weekends. They’ve been asking for power; now they’ve got it. We’ve already had several people with tickets on Eastern go back and change their reservations. The petition, circulated by the Gad- “What’s baffling to me,” Walters added, “is that some people aren’t willing to take a stand. It’s their lives.” Dorms / 4 Housing Faces $47,000 Deficit By LINDA ORMES Of The Hurricane Staff Thousands View Festival University housing will lose $47,040 this semester because there are 147 vacancies in the residence areas. Last year at this time there were only 78 vacancies. James Grimm, director of housing, said one reason for the increase in empty rooms is that this year there are 237 less freshmen enrolled and freshmen are requied to live on campus. Also, he said 105 students called to cancel at the end of August. By that time students who had been placed on a waiting list in the spring were already able to get off-campus housing. Each year housing takes room reservations for more students than rooms, but this big question would be whether university regulations should be enforced at the approved apartments. Grimm said he knows of 10 or 12 schools that have stopped approving off-campus housing because they “were burned legally.” “They had to face suits by parents, landlords and stu- dents and the university was caught in the middle,” he added. Finally, he said a tenant union proposition would be an expensive undertaking. The University of Florida has a $30,000 budget for their off-campus housing department, “and we can’t afford that,” Grimm said. year apparently, Grimm said, they did not “over-sell” enough. Mahoney Hall has the most vacancies. The air-conditioned dorms have the least vacancies and 960 and 1968 dorms have no vacancies in the Men’s towers. Since school began 52 students have moved out of the dorms to off-campus housing. The housing office provides a list of off-campus apartments for students. Grimm said he feels this system is better than a tenant union situation in which the university would approve a list of apartments and landlords as a service to the students. In a tenant union system the university would keep tabs on the land-lords to insure that the student was getting fair treatment. The University of Florida uses such a system. Grimm said at that school, landlords need the students for an income since UF is located in a small town. In Miami, however, he i —Photo by MIKE GARRETT Dr. Stanford Discusses UN’s Success ... COLSO’s Line Meyers prepares to speak Stanford Credits UN Successes said, “We don’t have a big stick over landlords. A landlord has many other prospective tenants he can rent to besides students.” Also, Grimm said, “when the student moves off-campus it’s usually for his real independence. Why should mother university tag along with him to make sure he doesn’t get in trouble?” Legal implications would also be involved with a tenant system, Grimm said. A President Henry King Stanford told UM Students Friday that Americans don’t give enough credit to the United Nations. solve problems on the verge of breaking into hostilities.” Inaugurating the UM celebration of UN Day, Dr. Stanford said: “I think we do the UN a disservice if we stop with the just compliment. We can point to many successful missions of UN, where it’s been able to re- Dr. Stanford, who said he is old enough to remember the beginnings not only of the UN, but the League of Nations, said one of the greatest problems faced by UN today is that “certain nations seek to use it for their own purposes.” . ...V. —Photo By BUZZ BIRNBACH ‘People Seem Aware’ ... student power against Eastern Airline United Nations Day, sponsored by CCUN (Collegiate Council of the United Nations) and COISO (Council of International Student Organizations) featured movies, a lecture, a judo match, and a talent show. The history of the first black republic in the New World was discussed by John M. Dyer, chairman of the UM Marketing Department. He spoke about the Republic of Palmares, in northeastern Brazil. Palmares was a runaway slave community of over 20,000 inhabitants, Dyer said. It existed for the greater part of the 17th century and was “remarkably organized.” “If the Republic of Palmares had been allowed to continue for another century, I believe it would have survived as a nation”, Dyer said. “Today when we’re going through a period of black awareness, this is an example of one of the developments which has never been publicized.” Palmares was erased from the map by a series of Dutch and Portuguese invasions which they successfully resisted for about a century. Today, it is only a memory in Brazilian folklore, Dyer said. A judo match by the l/M Judo Club, and movies on the structure and organization of the International Court and the UN were the displays shown throughout the afternoon in the International Lounge. flooc iid fx freshnes^ ÿ A ¿ft y°gA Tc¿a Thurs., 50 - U. Ok >*■ at: c ct: gCfc
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 27, 1970 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1970-10-27 |
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_19701027 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19701027 |
Digital ID | mhc_19701027_001 |
Full Text |
Fri..
inor Disciplinary Hearings Go Into Effect
Lincoin
ar
âs
Washiil-!
Vans«
,m§ton
rei' 3.1
Truman 3 S
«luì
Garf;
Roosi
eveit 2.
gating
pf System
mm
HaM]„8 ¡ î I Tyler 2.n 1
.,NDA ORMES
Vol. 46, No. 13
urnraiu'
Editorials
Should the Student Ache abolished?
■Ä’S-S«
'J&jzsr*
Tuesday, October 27, 1970
284-4401
f N°vl
ember
the
IP «““‘td Will
•“SU" ■»i"or in-
hoard is made up of b° three girls,
^r'studenth0Vs. The board
?»1D^F«re^ele_e.!dJrom
AYS
5 NIGHTLY id Carved!)
1 Chicken
11 E*® fin students by the mfand Review Com-
^Minor Discipline jj by student John S.
Le initiating a brand |
Archive | mhc_19701027_001.tif |
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