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!«'of 0r the l aula um°mh % ,H°rn L°! and Teaching In Jails’ Beats Rallies In D.C. í!l By NORMAN MANASA SUMMON Director Ment raged into the late hours the other night re A* ^merits of rallying in the streets of thS nation’s 0 tkeroteSt, what else, the war in Vietnam. oetion was addressed to me. Can you think of anv-flie ¿0-> is there anything more important? Vter ‘ came as a bit of a surprise: Yes. “You 0,1 la Spane^i^^f fprogram I direct. *• 1 Dm .*hlS ^ __«ncoH tn mp see ^BE»A3s<^ REVl< was supposed to mean was that everybody has W^thich he can be effective And that the options open ¡t5in m his efficacy must be chosen by the basis of their aS and the chance of getting them accomplished • lDfetter to run through the streets of Washington yell-h ü *aai (305) Stu 373. J^dents •1 359j ■mi .newly. Led division of Lied ecology. See app five for story. ing about the war (which «/««h • remain in Miami teaching m ” * any way afiect it)» °r to read? teachlng men ln the Dade County Jail how to Tbe chance is Id learn byWnow°me °f ”ot really- You'd thiIlk folks n?„w'!L?UeSSes ot w»y Pe0Ple do go, however, seem to be one of three: haveTfarnSDby™wWAR' BUt &S 1 Say> you’d think they’d demoFn°sfraiors ADVENTURE OF IT ALL. Cops and street drama; just like when we were kids. Plus all the fun . . . plenty of good fellowships, free sex, free drugs. The young commiserating with each other; the somewhat forced feeling that we were together once. TO MAKE A BUCK. Sometimes the drugs are not so free. As is obvious, the Capitol did not tremble or fall when the bronze medals clinked at her feet, to say nothing of the war machine, the American government, or even something so punt as the regime in Saigon. Yet everybody will be happy. To all it is a profound exercise in “freedom” (who is it who does not love a parade?), with nobody getting hurt, not really. Unless, of course, somebody gets killed and then what a mess that would be! The authorities will be happy because, although they will prosecute lawbreaks to the full extent of the law, where else in the world could 300,000 people march against a war they despised and have absolutely no affect on it. And the kids will thrill their grandchildren with stories filled with bravado, of how they ran the tear gas barrage at Dupont Circle. And the war, like Casey’s immortal band, played on and on. Although the recent demonstrators in Washington have yet to learn how futile their efforts really are, some have learned by their experience in previous demonstrations. After 10 years or so of beating our head against a bloody and unyielding wall, they learned that what they had to say about Vietnam didn’t mean one damn thing to anybody who was in Continued on Page 6 Winner of College Journalism’s Highest Award — Pacemaker 1970 Voi. 46, No. 46 CM Sports Quarterback John Hornibrook now in UM’s driver’s seat. See page 10. Friday, May 7, 1971 wanted ERS!TY OF MIAmTS WED|C|NE D|V|S|0^ ATR|C RESEARCH OFFERS iportuoity to porticipo,, I >°n* developmental nJ ogram in research with I y and onthdepressont | both mole ond female years of age who Mpe: ■us tension, anxiety/rep. ■ ghts, fears, depression, I amnia, irritability, difli. I :entrating ond appetite I :onsidered. j •ipation in this project I f confidential ond your I ement will be approxi- f minutes a week for,o i oeriod. You may moke I by phoning 350-6464 1 A.M. and 5 P.M.Mon-i Friday, ith knowledge of auto-ornent to work in whole-1 pply. Commission basis, | Supply 635-0376. ates to take 1 bedroom I droom opt. on Kendall | st to August 31st, rent, furn., utilities, No I ■unshine; Weeknights I . (except Thursday)at 5 — weekends ol 3 ti’ve of-I Europe! I isestwo y, Switz., ,06-9058 isenger to New Jersey, inals. Coll 274-8471. share van ,nd Mexico, June 3s and weekends. aterbeds u„dS35-J"b'l Lynda 284- 6243. erbe«1* $3« xie Hway " M- ^fr<H izes avoi|ob Ljiity if erdamoge r^. all beds)- 5 Y ^ \ p sea led se° ^ ol Distribu' ia-9074- 0 Axes I0(i le lstructors Irepresentative of the Dement of Health, Educa-jnd Welfare will be 1 to UM to speak to ! instructors who may , “discriminatory” con- L representative is com-B o UM because HEW is anting English instructor, Nancy Clasby who is g her job because her ,ndis also employed in iglish department. | Dr, Clasby’s contract is jthe usual kind which [its tenure, but rather -one illy reserved for visiting ssors, those over 65, or |.time instructors. Iw specifically wants to how many full-time jien instructors have been ¿with this type of con- Stt said she knows of (women in the universi-ito are in similar posi- phave just found out that ! women in the history rtment are being termini,” Dr. Clasby said. '. Clasby said the HEW tentative would like to |#with as many full-time i instructors as possi-have non-tenure pro-fug contracts. (crested women instruc-Nf obtain further infor-I® from Dr. Clasby at |ere will be a rally at the ^ today at 3 p.m. Come 1 support Dr. Clasby. mm m School’s Out! Last weekend tens of thousands of students, Viet Vets for Peace, and other concerned United States citizens sojourned to the Nation’s capitol to either “stop the War or stop the government.” What —Photo By TURTLE started out to be a sincere protest of U.S. foreign involvement ended up as a nightmare of plastic dishonesty and drug abuse. Hurricane feature contributor Turtle was present for the events of May 1 and 2 and gives his first-hand report of the May Day Collective’s activities on Page 3. |B/S Yearbook Arrives Early | SyBUL LIZEWSKI 5f T8e Hurricane Staff lines and groping f barked the arrival of ' ®IS, UM’s annual 0n; The yearbook, arrived on campus Cay’ came a week than originally sched-ls the first one to be |?earW the United States ^ Bukhair, IBIS 1972 . ;n„as ,Produced his sec-L fmal publication for lsiar>raS als° editor of Win* RlS iS-a sin§le 544-L0lu«e with a double teto’i2enmg 5°th from l left and left to right from the center. The back cover, measuring 16x/2 by ny4 inches, is common to both bindings. A cardboard sleeve, which may hold either one or both sections shut, is provided. It may be removed for multiple viewing of both sections. The red, white and blue sleeve is designed with a motif of the American flag encompassed with barbed wire. Bukhair employed a special color process, Kromek-ote, for the 64 pages of color photography. It is the firs time this process has ever been used in a college publication. Bukhair is not billing his creation as a “yearbook, bu as the “IBIS, a new form of annual publication by the University of Miami.” He also sold no advertising in the book because he felt that it was “inappropriate for this type of publication.” Bukhair has nothing but praise for his staff: “This was more than a full time job for a small highly skilled group.” Because of the extraordinarily unique format, the book was hand-bound by Hunter Publishing Company. To clear the production lines, the entire Hunter forces worked to complete IBIS production ahead of schedule. Since the entire book went to the publishers ahead of A m i «li »? editor; associate kiewicz, Pollack, _Photo By SCOTT BUESSOW Editor Bud Bukhair ^^Out^IBK ^ ^ (j„e SBG Audit Halted; Faulty Books Cited schedule, a little coverage of the year was lost. “But it was a dead year anyway,” Bukhair said. “What we lost in coverage, we gained in cost, color and so on. We saved many dollars in production. I am very grateful to my staff,” he said. Bukhair considers both books which he has edited “unique . . . They each have their own character and we hope that this year’s book does as well competitively as last year’s ‘Age of Aquarius.’ “The second section turned from left to right but it does flow. I am pleased that I did it that way,” Bukhair said. IBIS staff sentiments are summed up by member Jo Ann Schwartz: “I have greatly appreciated the opportunity to work on this year’s IBIS, and I have especially enjoyed working with Bud Bukhair, Melodie Wengrin, and Liz Crawford. “I hope that next year’s IBIS will be as successful as it has been these past two years,” she said. This year’s IBIS staff includes Alexander M. Bukhair, Melodie J. Wengrin, editor; Ken Rat-photo editor; Ira runa^jv, business manager; Cherryll Bider, organizations; Elizabeth Crawford, seniors; Stephen Feller, sports; Robyn Bukhair, activities; Sandy Kampf, copy; Joanne Schwartz, secretary; Leslie Silverstein, assistant; John Ruffalo, assistant. Personnel includes, Copy: Bill Lizewski, Jim Fishel, Stu Weiss, Barb and A1 Waters. Photography: Bruce Bartoo, Elliot Derdak, Dane Taylor, Nathan Benn, Sam Murfitt, Michael Wray. Color photography: Bruce Bartoo. MRHA’s Structure Revised By LINDA ORMES Of The Hurricane Staff Men’s residence halls will be getting about $10,000 extra for programming next year because of sweeping changes in the Men’s Residence Hall Association con-sitution. The constitution, passed by the legislature Monday, abolishes the four executive offices and the room and board stipends the officers received. The executive budget will also be discontinued. Last year the executive budget (including stipends) totalled $9,538. This money which comes out of students’ housing fees, will now go directly to the five halls. Each men’s area will have approximately $2,000 more to spend per year. Other changes in the constitution call for the replacing of the MRHA president by a chairman. A five-man board of area presidents will take the place of legislature of house governors and area presidents. The chairman will be elected by the board, rather than elected popularly. “The reasoning behind this was to make the election “more non-political,” Tony Passarello, MRHA’s Student Body Government senator said. “Also, the chairman will be able to work more ef- Continued on Page 2 -Photo By SUNSHINE V.P. Spurlock Works Diligently . . . under students’ artwork UM Conserves Water UM President Henry King Stanford has announced that although the University is in no danger of closing down it has discontinued or decreased water use in several areas in an attempt to reduce water consumption. In an effort to decrease water use by 20 per cent the following measures have been taken: • Decorative water displays and fountains have been turned off. • The student car washing facility has been temporarily closed. 0 Washing of U vehicles has been discontinued • Lawn sprinklers have been turned off with the exception of the intrai-mural fields. “I ask all members of the University community — faculty and staff — as well as students to minimize water use wherever possible. While the University is in no danger of being closed because of the critical water situation, as a few students have speculated, it is essential that everyone conserve water in the over-all public interest during this critical drought period,” Stanford said. Memorial: Sparse Crowd By BILL LIZEWSKI Of The Hurricane Staff Wednesday afternoon. Microphones and speakers at the Rock. A year ago Jack-son State. A year ago and a day, Kent State. Sponsored by concerned students and the University Chaplains’ Association. Subject’s the same as a year ago — war, peace, death. . . repression and the military-industrial complex. People there disappointed with turnout. “I think there should be more people here” . . . “Not enough people interested” . . . “This isn’t accomplishing a thing . . . people talking, talking, talking . . . people here have heard this shit” . . . “Sort of exercise in futility” . . . “Man is a civilized animal . . . how can he accept war?” . . . “Not enough publicity.” Sixty-two year old lady. “Very set about what young people can do — I think it is an outrage. — No one to recount those brutal murders at Kent.” Representing “Young Voters for Peace.” Father Tom Crowder: “Attempting a vehicle . . . students can express disapproval in U.S. policy in S.E. Asia.” New Party — new hope. Cannot, on this campus, become silent majority. “When will we ever learn? When will we ever learn? When will we ever learn?” —Photo By JULIUS BARATH Peace Movement Speaks Out ... at Wednesday Rock observances ¥ Massive Spending Exposed By ELIZABETH OSTROFF Hurricane News Editor The audit of Student Body Government’s finances ended officially Monday when head auditor Robert Jordan said it could not be continued without books. Jordan, who is president of Beta Alpha Psi Accounting Honorary said, “It’s not just a spur of the moment decision, technically there’s no way to do it. “The lack of any kind of system here, makes it impossible to run an audit as an audit is known in the profession,” Jordan said. Last week Jordan and his fellow auditors told Treasurer Robert Drake that he must produce certain information or face a discontinuation of the audit. Drake said he kept no books, but instead a file of requisitions. This system of “book-keeping” is the traditional one used by SBG treasurers. “From what we found we will advise and consult with the incoming and existing officers and help them in any way possible to set up a responsible system of management,” Jordan said. Monday Jordan met with Krasnow, Drake, and incoming Treasurer Howard Zus-man. At this meeting Krasnow instructed Drake to bill three of SBG’s biggest debtors: students who have used the bailbond program, UM hostesses for whom SBG laid out $760 for their $40 outfits, and those students who still owe money for long-distance phone calls. Drake told Krasnow that the phone bill hadn’t been paid yet despite the fact that he had received payment from some of those involved because, “It’s not fair to deposit checks until all the people have paid.” Drake added that all persons owing money to the bailbond program were billed last week. He also said the hostess would be asked to reimburse SBG. When the subject of the student discount cards came up Krasnow said he had not yet drawn-up a written contract with Lawrence Lands, who is in charge of sales. Lands originally brought the idea to Krasnow who said he would write a personal check to cover the SBG expenditure of over $600 for printing, should the program fail to break even. So far no one knows how many of the cards have been sold or given away. It is not even certain who has the cards for distribution. Jordan also brought up an SBG expenditure of $2,000 that was given to the “Vote 18” lobby. Jordan felt no such “political” expenditure of that amount should have been made without a student rererenaum. Treasurer Bob Drake said Continued On Page 2
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, May 7, 1971 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1971-05-07 |
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_19710507 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19710507 |
Digital ID | mhc_19710507_001 |
Full Text |
!«'of
0r the l
aula um°mh %
,H°rn L°!
and
Teaching In Jails’ Beats Rallies In D.C.
í!l
By NORMAN MANASA SUMMON Director
Ment raged into the late hours the other night re
A* ^merits of rallying in the streets of thS nation’s 0 tkeroteSt, what else, the war in Vietnam.
oetion was addressed to me. Can you think of anv-flie ¿0-> is there anything more important?
Vter ‘
came as a bit of a surprise: Yes. “You
0,1
la Spane^i^^f fprogram I direct.
*• 1 Dm .*hlS ^ __«ncoH tn mp
see
^BE»A3s<^
REVl<
was supposed to mean was that everybody has W^thich he can be effective And that the options open ¡t5in m his efficacy must be chosen by the basis of their aS and the chance of getting them accomplished • lDfetter to run through the streets of Washington yell-h ü
*aai
(305) Stu
373.
J^dents
•1
359j
■mi .newly.
Led division of
Lied ecology. See
app five for story.
ing about the war (which «/««h •
remain in Miami teaching m ” * any way afiect it)» °r to read? teachlng men ln the Dade County Jail how to
Tbe chance is
Id learn byWnow°me °f ”ot really- You'd thiIlk folks
n?„w'!L?UeSSes ot w»y Pe0Ple do go, however, seem to
be one of three:
haveTfarnSDby™wWAR' BUt &S 1 Say> you’d think they’d
demoFn°sfraiors ADVENTURE OF IT ALL. Cops and
street drama; just like when we were kids. Plus
all the fun . . . plenty of good fellowships, free sex, free drugs. The young commiserating with each other; the somewhat forced feeling that we were together once.
TO MAKE A BUCK. Sometimes the drugs are not so free.
As is obvious, the Capitol did not tremble or fall when the bronze medals clinked at her feet, to say nothing of the war machine, the American government, or even something so punt as the regime in Saigon.
Yet everybody will be happy. To all it is a profound exercise in “freedom” (who is it who does not love a parade?), with nobody getting hurt, not really. Unless, of course, somebody gets killed and then what a mess that would be! The authorities will be happy because, although they will prosecute lawbreaks to the full extent of the law, where else in the
world could 300,000 people march against a war they despised and have absolutely no affect on it. And the kids will thrill their grandchildren with stories filled with bravado, of how they ran the tear gas barrage at Dupont Circle.
And the war, like Casey’s immortal band, played on and
on.
Although the recent demonstrators in Washington have yet to learn how futile their efforts really are, some have learned by their experience in previous demonstrations. After 10 years or so of beating our head against a bloody and unyielding wall, they learned that what they had to say about Vietnam didn’t mean one damn thing to anybody who was in
Continued on Page 6
Winner of College Journalism’s Highest Award — Pacemaker 1970
Voi. 46, No. 46
CM Sports
Quarterback John Hornibrook now in UM’s driver’s seat. See page 10.
Friday, May 7, 1971
wanted
ERS!TY OF MIAmTS WED|C|NE D|V|S|0^
ATR|C RESEARCH OFFERS iportuoity to porticipo,, I >°n* developmental nJ ogram in research with I y and onthdepressont |
both mole ond female
years of age who Mpe:
■us tension, anxiety/rep. ■ ghts, fears, depression, I amnia, irritability, difli. I :entrating ond appetite I :onsidered. j
•ipation in this project I f confidential ond your I ement will be approxi- f minutes a week for,o i oeriod. You may moke I by phoning 350-6464 1 A.M. and 5 P.M.Mon-i Friday,
ith knowledge of auto-ornent to work in whole-1 pply. Commission basis, | Supply 635-0376.
ates to take 1 bedroom I droom opt. on Kendall | st to August 31st, rent, furn., utilities, No I ■unshine; Weeknights I . (except Thursday)at 5 — weekends ol
3 ti’ve of-I Europe! I isestwo y, Switz., ,06-9058
isenger to New Jersey, inals. Coll 274-8471.
share van ,nd Mexico, June 3s and weekends.
aterbeds
u„dS35-J"b'l
Lynda 284-
6243.
erbe«1*
$3«
xie Hway "
M-
^fr |
Archive | mhc_19710507_001.tif |
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