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EXAMS AGAIN, HIT IT FANS Kxam Schedule Page 2 The Mia urricane 40tu Year, No. 13 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, January 8, 1965 UM Will Take Ovd- NCC »ITT IF Semester Keview if’ 5 By DICK MACK HURRICANE Reporter Hope for creation of the only center in the South that will perform open heart surg-; ery exclusively for children got a boost last week when it was announced that the UM School of Medicine will undertake operation of the National Children’s Cardiac Hospital. The announcement was made jointly by UM President Henry King Stanford and hospital Board Chairman Richard I. Berenson. The hospital is a $2 million, two-story structure adjacent to Jackson Memorial Hospital. It contains 50 beds, an out-patient clinic and research facilities. UM will eventually expand it in include surgical facilities and three more floors. Berenson said that because of “modern developments in the treatment of rheumatic fever, it Asian Studies Scholar Honor Court Grad Official Named Suspends Two We thought we would print this picture for the benefit of those students who need visual inspiration. No further comment is needed. This is the last issue of the HURRICANE for this semester. We will magically re-appear on Feb. 5. Happy Exams. James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, will be the speaker at mid-year commencement exercises for 550 graduates Jan. 25, at 10:30 a.m., in the Miami Beach Auditorium. Also featured in the day’s events will be the 3 p.m. dedica- tion of the Computing Center, with Dr. Herbert Hollowmon, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Science and Technology, speaking. Announcements and invitations will be available for graduating seniors at the Bookstore Monday, Jan. 11. Caps and gowns can be picked up Jan. 18. Dr. John A. Harrison, chairman of the University of Florida’s history department and chairman of the high honors program in the College of Arts and Sciences, will become associate dean of the UM Graduate School, May 1. A distinguished Asian studies* scholar, he also will hold the j rank of professor of history, UM \ rank of professor of history. Dr. Harrison will succeed Dr. Carroll V. Truss, who will return to full-time teaching and research as an associate professor of psychology. The historian joined the University of Florida faculty in 1949 as an instructor. He became a full professor in 1958 and chairman of UF”s high honors program for arts and sciences students in 1959. A native of Johnstown, N.Y., Dr. Harrison earned his baccalaureate degree at Columbia ,TC.„ „ . ... ... . ... .. ,lru ... ,, USG Orientation Week program, University in 1941. When World u , cnn » j , USG Slates 'Orientation’ Cheer up, freshmen. You are well on your way to becoming upper-classmen and, according to Neil Phillips, chairman of the Republican Clubs . . . One Or Is It Two? War II interrupted his graduate studies, he became a language intelligence officer to the commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet and later a member of about 500 new students are ex pected, some of whom will be facing college for the first time. "The purpose of this orientation,” Phillips said, “is to ac- Two freshman women were suspended for the spring semester and placed on disciplinary , probation for the duration of their studies at UM in Tuesday's j Honor Court session. One of the girls had taken a Natural Science exam for the other. The one whose examination was falsified was given an E in the course in addition to the suspension and probation. Commented Honor Court Chief Justice Tim Anagnost, “This | particular hearing was encourag-1 ing to me in a way because the girls were reported by another student in the class. This is an example of the sense of responsibility that the Honor Code attempts to instill in students, and we are happy to see that some of them are conscious of it.” In regard to the coming exams, he added, "Finals usually bring out a seige of various forms of cheating. We remind students ! that the Honor Code is rigidly j enforced «luring finals.” Conflicting reports have the on campus both merged and at The groups formed independ-* ently last autumn and applied for charters to the Student Activities office. They were told that they would have to merge or that one of them would have to be eliminated — duplicate organizations could not be chartered on the UM campus. There are two accounts of the joint meeting of the groups just before Christmas vacation. According to Richard Boland, j president of the more conserva- | tive group, the merger attempt New Rules On U.S. Draft Just because a man is in col- | lege, he is not released from ] registering for the Universal Military Training and Service Act, as Amended. It is required by this act that a man must be registered by his 18th birthday or five days thereafter and this must be done in person. In addition, the registrant is required to have identification driver’s license or birth certificate. Also, Social Security card, if under such Act. An Alien is not exempt from registration unless he has an of- | ficial document which identifies him as a person not required to present himself for registration. \ Alien student should consult the j Selective Service System. They j are requested to present passport and/or Alien Registration Re- j ceipt Card. two Young Republican clubs odds. was successful. "We got together, we adopted a constitution unanimously, and the two groups are now working together. There was some misapprehension on their part that our group was a nest of extremists, which was absolutely ridiculous. “The entire group, which consisted of about four people including the president, Barbara Bivans, has joined us — as a matter of fact, one of their former members, John Peoples, is writing up our statement of principles to be submitted later to the Hurricane.” Barbara Bivans. head of the more - or - less liberal group, gives a different impression of the meeting. “We were dismayed at the prospect of merging with them, but four of us went to the meeting—there were about lfteen in our group — and submitted our views. We did adopt a constitution—it was largely a procedural matter. But, we submitted two motions to them to be included as statements of principle: (1) a denunciation of extremism including the John Birch Society, the Ku Klux Klan. and the Communist Party, and (2) a statement that all people are entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness regardless of race, creed, color and national origins. “They rejected both of them.” Says John Peoples, "No one has said anything to me about writing anything for the Hurricane. but I do know that we aren’t joining them. We were willing to bend, but they were not.” the Naval Technical Mission Japan. He resumed graduate work at the University of California Berkeley, receiving his PhD. 1949. Living Abroad The Experiment in International Living is ac- i repting applications for its two-month summer program of living and traveling in 41 countries of Africa, Asia. Latin America and Eastern and Western Europe. Lars Carlson. Experiment field representative, will interview prospective applicants Monday at 4 p.m. Monday in the Reading Room of 730 EasL to | quaint the new students with the activities and procedures of UM, hoping to impart some of the spirit which helped make the fall ^ | semester one of our best.” The breakdown of the week is __ ! as follows: MONDAY, JAN. 25 . . .Housing available. TUESDAY, JAN. 26 . . . New students meet in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall for a welcoming address by President Stanford. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 27 . . . Dean of Men, Dean of Women and USG speakers will instruct incoming students on UM policy. Howdy Dance, sponsored by USG, in the Great Lounge of Mahoney Hall. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. JAN. 28-29 . . . Registration. USG invites all students to attend the dance to meet incoming: j members of the university facul-1 ty. Coat and tie for men. Friends' Set Wylie Speech Author Philip Wylie will be i first speaker in the 1965 UM Friends of the University Li-! brary lecture programs. Wylie will speak at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 15, in the Brockway Lecture Hall of the university’s j Otto G. Richter Library. His topic will be “The Influence of Writing.” A resident of South Miami for many years, Wylie has authored more than 40 books, among them "Generation of Vipers,” “The Disappearance” and “Triumph." He has written articles for the Saturday Evening Post and other major publications and his latest book, “They Both Were Naked,” has been accepted by Doubleday and Company, Inc., for publication in the fall. seemed to our board no longer possible for the hospital to meet its responsibilities as an isolated institution. We therefore concluded that the hospital can best serve the community as part of the UM School of Medicine.” The hospital will continue to operate as a non-profit institution and the present board of trustees will continue in office. UM and Metro are attempting to join separate resources to produce a joint medical center which would develop into a “great patient carc-teaching-research center." UM trustees have endorsed a policy statement which they wish the County Commission to adopt. The policy provides for functional and physical integration of Jackson Memorial Hospital and the UM Medical School, joint employment of a consultant to develop a plan, and joint 1-nancing, administration, operation and maintenance programs. With collaboration of the two institutions, the $25 million they planned to spend on separate buildings can be combined for integrated facilities. Metro will buy the land for UM buildings. The university will spend $18 million from donations and federal grants for medical education. The county may be able to obtain one-third federal mathing funds for new hospital facilities. This could he increased to one-half, however. If they join with UM in a combined teaching-patient care renter. The new medical center would be more inviting to doctors and would be able to afford more elaborate equipment. UM Director of Medicine Dr. William J. Herrington said an ideal medical center is one in which the activities of patient care, teaching, and research arc coordinated and in one structure. The new medical center would also partially offset the current tax drain through appeal to people outside the county, as well as to more within. Whether the plans turn into reality depends upon the Jan. 11 meeting of Metro commissioners, at which time they will consider the proposed policy statement. Gilbert Establishes New Fund Henry Gilbert, a Miami insurance analyst, has established a $2500 scholarship fund for UM students interested j in becoming life insurance counselors. The first recipient will be named in | February, according to Dr. Clark E. j Myers, dean of the School of Business Administration. Pictured, left to right, discussing the j scholarship, are Dr. Donald R. Johnson, professor of finance, Dr. Henry King Stanford, Dr. Myers and Henry Gilbert. Dr. Johnson and finance professor Dr. William G. Heuson are on the selection committee, along with Dr. My- A life insurance underwriter for 22 years, Gilbert has a score of national awards for superior service, including 17 consecutive years as a member of the Million Dollar Round Table. Two Scientists ' Guest Lecture Two of the nation’s leading scholars—political scientist Herman Finer and physicist Julian Schwinger — began stays as visiting lecturers at UM in January. Dr. Schwinger, recently named by President Johnson to receive the National Medal of Science, will instruct UM physics students during the month. Dr. Finer, author of some of the most popular studies in his field, will he a visiting lecturer in the government throughout the spring semester. A Harvard faculty member since 1945, Schwinger wrote his first paper on nuclear physics at the age of 18. In 1951, he won the first Einstein Prize for his explanations of the interactions of light and matter.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, January 08, 1965 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1965-01-08 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
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_19650108 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19650108 |
Digital ID | MHC_19650108_001 |
Full Text | EXAMS AGAIN, HIT IT FANS Kxam Schedule Page 2 The Mia urricane 40tu Year, No. 13 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, January 8, 1965 UM Will Take Ovd- NCC »ITT IF Semester Keview if’ 5 By DICK MACK HURRICANE Reporter Hope for creation of the only center in the South that will perform open heart surg-; ery exclusively for children got a boost last week when it was announced that the UM School of Medicine will undertake operation of the National Children’s Cardiac Hospital. The announcement was made jointly by UM President Henry King Stanford and hospital Board Chairman Richard I. Berenson. The hospital is a $2 million, two-story structure adjacent to Jackson Memorial Hospital. It contains 50 beds, an out-patient clinic and research facilities. UM will eventually expand it in include surgical facilities and three more floors. Berenson said that because of “modern developments in the treatment of rheumatic fever, it Asian Studies Scholar Honor Court Grad Official Named Suspends Two We thought we would print this picture for the benefit of those students who need visual inspiration. No further comment is needed. This is the last issue of the HURRICANE for this semester. We will magically re-appear on Feb. 5. Happy Exams. James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, will be the speaker at mid-year commencement exercises for 550 graduates Jan. 25, at 10:30 a.m., in the Miami Beach Auditorium. Also featured in the day’s events will be the 3 p.m. dedica- tion of the Computing Center, with Dr. Herbert Hollowmon, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Science and Technology, speaking. Announcements and invitations will be available for graduating seniors at the Bookstore Monday, Jan. 11. Caps and gowns can be picked up Jan. 18. Dr. John A. Harrison, chairman of the University of Florida’s history department and chairman of the high honors program in the College of Arts and Sciences, will become associate dean of the UM Graduate School, May 1. A distinguished Asian studies* scholar, he also will hold the j rank of professor of history, UM \ rank of professor of history. Dr. Harrison will succeed Dr. Carroll V. Truss, who will return to full-time teaching and research as an associate professor of psychology. The historian joined the University of Florida faculty in 1949 as an instructor. He became a full professor in 1958 and chairman of UF”s high honors program for arts and sciences students in 1959. A native of Johnstown, N.Y., Dr. Harrison earned his baccalaureate degree at Columbia ,TC.„ „ . ... ... . ... .. ,lru ... ,, USG Orientation Week program, University in 1941. When World u , cnn » j , USG Slates 'Orientation’ Cheer up, freshmen. You are well on your way to becoming upper-classmen and, according to Neil Phillips, chairman of the Republican Clubs . . . One Or Is It Two? War II interrupted his graduate studies, he became a language intelligence officer to the commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet and later a member of about 500 new students are ex pected, some of whom will be facing college for the first time. "The purpose of this orientation,” Phillips said, “is to ac- Two freshman women were suspended for the spring semester and placed on disciplinary , probation for the duration of their studies at UM in Tuesday's j Honor Court session. One of the girls had taken a Natural Science exam for the other. The one whose examination was falsified was given an E in the course in addition to the suspension and probation. Commented Honor Court Chief Justice Tim Anagnost, “This | particular hearing was encourag-1 ing to me in a way because the girls were reported by another student in the class. This is an example of the sense of responsibility that the Honor Code attempts to instill in students, and we are happy to see that some of them are conscious of it.” In regard to the coming exams, he added, "Finals usually bring out a seige of various forms of cheating. We remind students ! that the Honor Code is rigidly j enforced «luring finals.” Conflicting reports have the on campus both merged and at The groups formed independ-* ently last autumn and applied for charters to the Student Activities office. They were told that they would have to merge or that one of them would have to be eliminated — duplicate organizations could not be chartered on the UM campus. There are two accounts of the joint meeting of the groups just before Christmas vacation. According to Richard Boland, j president of the more conserva- | tive group, the merger attempt New Rules On U.S. Draft Just because a man is in col- | lege, he is not released from ] registering for the Universal Military Training and Service Act, as Amended. It is required by this act that a man must be registered by his 18th birthday or five days thereafter and this must be done in person. In addition, the registrant is required to have identification driver’s license or birth certificate. Also, Social Security card, if under such Act. An Alien is not exempt from registration unless he has an of- | ficial document which identifies him as a person not required to present himself for registration. \ Alien student should consult the j Selective Service System. They j are requested to present passport and/or Alien Registration Re- j ceipt Card. two Young Republican clubs odds. was successful. "We got together, we adopted a constitution unanimously, and the two groups are now working together. There was some misapprehension on their part that our group was a nest of extremists, which was absolutely ridiculous. “The entire group, which consisted of about four people including the president, Barbara Bivans, has joined us — as a matter of fact, one of their former members, John Peoples, is writing up our statement of principles to be submitted later to the Hurricane.” Barbara Bivans. head of the more - or - less liberal group, gives a different impression of the meeting. “We were dismayed at the prospect of merging with them, but four of us went to the meeting—there were about lfteen in our group — and submitted our views. We did adopt a constitution—it was largely a procedural matter. But, we submitted two motions to them to be included as statements of principle: (1) a denunciation of extremism including the John Birch Society, the Ku Klux Klan. and the Communist Party, and (2) a statement that all people are entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness regardless of race, creed, color and national origins. “They rejected both of them.” Says John Peoples, "No one has said anything to me about writing anything for the Hurricane. but I do know that we aren’t joining them. We were willing to bend, but they were not.” the Naval Technical Mission Japan. He resumed graduate work at the University of California Berkeley, receiving his PhD. 1949. Living Abroad The Experiment in International Living is ac- i repting applications for its two-month summer program of living and traveling in 41 countries of Africa, Asia. Latin America and Eastern and Western Europe. Lars Carlson. Experiment field representative, will interview prospective applicants Monday at 4 p.m. Monday in the Reading Room of 730 EasL to | quaint the new students with the activities and procedures of UM, hoping to impart some of the spirit which helped make the fall ^ | semester one of our best.” The breakdown of the week is __ ! as follows: MONDAY, JAN. 25 . . .Housing available. TUESDAY, JAN. 26 . . . New students meet in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall for a welcoming address by President Stanford. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 27 . . . Dean of Men, Dean of Women and USG speakers will instruct incoming students on UM policy. Howdy Dance, sponsored by USG, in the Great Lounge of Mahoney Hall. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. JAN. 28-29 . . . Registration. USG invites all students to attend the dance to meet incoming: j members of the university facul-1 ty. Coat and tie for men. Friends' Set Wylie Speech Author Philip Wylie will be i first speaker in the 1965 UM Friends of the University Li-! brary lecture programs. Wylie will speak at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 15, in the Brockway Lecture Hall of the university’s j Otto G. Richter Library. His topic will be “The Influence of Writing.” A resident of South Miami for many years, Wylie has authored more than 40 books, among them "Generation of Vipers,” “The Disappearance” and “Triumph." He has written articles for the Saturday Evening Post and other major publications and his latest book, “They Both Were Naked,” has been accepted by Doubleday and Company, Inc., for publication in the fall. seemed to our board no longer possible for the hospital to meet its responsibilities as an isolated institution. We therefore concluded that the hospital can best serve the community as part of the UM School of Medicine.” The hospital will continue to operate as a non-profit institution and the present board of trustees will continue in office. UM and Metro are attempting to join separate resources to produce a joint medical center which would develop into a “great patient carc-teaching-research center." UM trustees have endorsed a policy statement which they wish the County Commission to adopt. The policy provides for functional and physical integration of Jackson Memorial Hospital and the UM Medical School, joint employment of a consultant to develop a plan, and joint 1-nancing, administration, operation and maintenance programs. With collaboration of the two institutions, the $25 million they planned to spend on separate buildings can be combined for integrated facilities. Metro will buy the land for UM buildings. The university will spend $18 million from donations and federal grants for medical education. The county may be able to obtain one-third federal mathing funds for new hospital facilities. This could he increased to one-half, however. If they join with UM in a combined teaching-patient care renter. The new medical center would be more inviting to doctors and would be able to afford more elaborate equipment. UM Director of Medicine Dr. William J. Herrington said an ideal medical center is one in which the activities of patient care, teaching, and research arc coordinated and in one structure. The new medical center would also partially offset the current tax drain through appeal to people outside the county, as well as to more within. Whether the plans turn into reality depends upon the Jan. 11 meeting of Metro commissioners, at which time they will consider the proposed policy statement. Gilbert Establishes New Fund Henry Gilbert, a Miami insurance analyst, has established a $2500 scholarship fund for UM students interested j in becoming life insurance counselors. The first recipient will be named in | February, according to Dr. Clark E. j Myers, dean of the School of Business Administration. Pictured, left to right, discussing the j scholarship, are Dr. Donald R. Johnson, professor of finance, Dr. Henry King Stanford, Dr. Myers and Henry Gilbert. Dr. Johnson and finance professor Dr. William G. Heuson are on the selection committee, along with Dr. My- A life insurance underwriter for 22 years, Gilbert has a score of national awards for superior service, including 17 consecutive years as a member of the Million Dollar Round Table. Two Scientists ' Guest Lecture Two of the nation’s leading scholars—political scientist Herman Finer and physicist Julian Schwinger — began stays as visiting lecturers at UM in January. Dr. Schwinger, recently named by President Johnson to receive the National Medal of Science, will instruct UM physics students during the month. Dr. Finer, author of some of the most popular studies in his field, will he a visiting lecturer in the government throughout the spring semester. A Harvard faculty member since 1945, Schwinger wrote his first paper on nuclear physics at the age of 18. In 1951, he won the first Einstein Prize for his explanations of the interactions of light and matter. |
Archive | MHC_19650108_001.tif |
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