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ell tor 5 quarter, unber 15 erth siini.* ur°n AH. refuse to d?y- from 6(1 during ictice ses. mforeseen should be 10 football dug very Walt Ki. apparent. ; officially k, it’s no ;en seeing , Pa., he resemb-amesake. :cessor is is a solid iir sped a. awn the 1 to Johns veness on ; so-called >sity. tomore, as took the ach Andy nt reason ments on nt,” Gus-vhen con-rre re-in-rg) wrist' ieves that gh results ned until lined the ith wrist jS counted dl’s cam- lty repod ,ck Novak e Junio> irily 1 Novaks im Bruno ^phomort r becaus^ d and Al with o” ie los* of ¡ricton^ -ain *°n' ¿tor* Charla rent ** Derby Day Toda T m Sororities fo ‘Strip’ On Field A in “outhouses” on the Stationed^ uM,g 12 sorori- vie this afternoon for es ^ ^ the Hth annual top hon<f pefby D8rhi fraternity sponsors Spring Derby Day for >rsity’s sororities. 'nAtv will be stationed A on the field, in jan ^th the "Day in the Day- „¿J a»®6- . throughout “Snatch A“tday, members of Sigma Da- Jm tote their top hats ® GWs are sup: them away>and .Hen try t, recover them- nr^0"^ ^Jal ^ at 3:30 pjn. , A four-legged race, sWp «e obstacle course and Strip ¡5 are among the events planned. ■ An egg and pepper contest, „»stay event and baby-bottle ¿tag contests are also on the Derby Day agenda. Highlighting the events ol the ‘Day in the Ozarks” will be the presentation of a Spirit Trophy. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority won last year. Five sorority girls were chosen Tuesday as finalists for Derby Day Queen. The queen will be announced this afternoon. Finalists for the crown are Jo Ann Pflug, Debby Weston, Marilyn Taylor, Caryl Durham and Gwen Crowe. A pre-game parade will feature representatives from each of the 12 sororities. Chairman for Derby Day is Sigma Chi’s Joe Enriquez. Bill Lo Corto is vice-chairman. Dr. Bestor, School Critic, Talks Today Dr. Arthur Bestor, distinguished educator and professor of his-°ry at the University of Illinois, J31 discuss “The World-Wide Smuggle for Men’s Minds” today f 3:30 P-m. in 720 Dorm’s Great umnge. Oue of America’s severest crit-cs of “progressive” education, Dr. °r is the fifth lecturer in the Un!fS sponsored by the ^graduate Student Govem-Ef1 “rt Delta Theta Mu, Arts ciences honor society. eral f e?Ucator has written sev- ration Ì\ induding “The Resto- Hook» 111 0ur Public lan(jc » 3nd Educational Waste- *7® article “What Went Prinwi D- S. Schoolà” was Report m News and World Convi^. • Was reprinted in the Sessional Record. dents6a!!??'6 J8 free to a11 stu_ and faculty members. ts*'aeli Attache isitiug Campus ..Michael am ^ ^ess o T?on> counselor for of Israel-^nformation Bureau °n Israel k ^ will speak k!ations at Sbl6ms of forelgo ^Unront t ,3° a‘m- Thursday in The s Lecture Hall. ^“sored by the ^ studentsGPartment’ is oper1 University of Miami urricane Coral Gables, Fla. March 25,1960 ■41VD ELECTIONS! USG Week: Jazz, Races, Lecture, Etc. By BARBARA McALPINE Activities ranging from student elections to bike races, from Drew Pearson’s lecture to Kai Winding’s horn will highlight Undergraduate Student Government Week, beginning Monday. The elections will be held Thursday and Friday for positions on the USG Council and for school government offices. 4 COUPLE WATCHES DYING LIGHTS OF CARNI-GRAS ■ See Page 9 Photo by Gulliver Shall We Dance...Or ■ More on play, Page 11. The 1 arrival of a French touring company to Miami created a bit of a mixup this week. It seems that UM French instructors want their students to attend the troupe’s production of Molieres “Le Misanthrope” tomorrow night. 1 But tomorrow night is also Men’s Residence Halls Association’s biggest formal of the year at the DuPont Plaza Hotel Several students who had already arranged to attend the dance issued complaints to the Dean of Men’s office this week concerning their professors’ "strong recommendation” that they ftend the performance at Gables High School. “There is no official departmental policy about whether students must attend the play ^ not said Dr. William Dismukes, head 3 the Modem Language Depart- mentW some instructors may have made this request. "Attendance by French sW- “There is no red 0^^ ^ this thing. famous play and want to see this famous piay USG Week Calendar All week: Charity Drive Monday: Iron Arrow tapping; Gamma Alpha Chi Fashion Show—2:30 Lowe Art Gallery Tuesday: Alpha Sigma Epsilon tapping; Jazz Concert-Kai Winding Septet-7 to 9 p.m. Athletic Field Wednesday: Qmicron Delta Kappa tapping; Bicycle Race —3 to 5 p.m.—around the campus ^ Thursday: Student Elections Friday: Student Elections; Drew Pearson lecture—3:30 p.m. — 720 Dormitory — 50 cents students. Saturday: Student Leader’s Banquet, 6 p.m.—Pub ALSO ON the ballot will be a referendum issue giving students the opportunity to choose between future final exam “time breaks” and normal six-day Easter vacations. Polls will be opened from 8:30 to 4:00 during the two days. Voting machines for the School of Business and College of Arts and Sciences will be in the Snake Pit in the Memorial Building; for the School of Education, in the Merrick Building Book Store; the School of Engineering, the Engineering Building, and the Music School, the Music Building. The week slides on with trombonist Kai Winding’s open-air jazz concert Tuesday night. The concert begins at 7:00 in the fenced-in Athletic Field. Miss Charity Drive, Judy Dickinson, will give a helping hand with canisters and ribbons to encourage givers to give and collectors to collect for the USG Week Charity Drive. The proceeds collected Monday through Wednesday will be divided among the Ashe Memorial Fund, the United Fund and the World University Fund. USG Week rolls around comers and curves in the “Little 500” bike race at 3 p.m. Wednesday. The race begins and ends in front of the Student Union Circle. The route will take S-curves from Miller Drive to Dickinson, to Walsh. The course whips on around to Ponce de Leon and back up Miller Drive. The entire route will be closed to traffic during the race. There will be a meeting for contestants Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Room 6 of the Student Union. GAMMA ALPHA CHI, national professional advertising fraternity for women, will display “Blueprints for Fashion” in the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery at 2:30 Monday. Models, including “Miss Sorority Model” ^nd UM hostesses, will show how to build a wardrobe by planning. Door prizes will be given. A fashion feature for men is the USG sponsored “Dress Right Contest.” It will be held throughout USG Week. * Entrants must meet at 3 p.m. today at the USG office, Room 6, Student Union. Booming drums Monday will signal the gentle tapping of the Iron Arrow, highest local men’s honorary. ODK, national men’s honorary, taps Wednesday. Alpha Sigma Epsilon, sophomore scholastic honorary, will tap Tuesday. USG Week ends with soft lights at a banquet for student leaders at the Pub Restaurant Saturday night. The new Council members will* be introduced and the “Who’s Who” certificates will be announced and presented. Pearson To Speak —DrewL That Is Drew Pearson, Washington's most controversial columnist, will speak on the U.S.’s shifting power in world affairs next Friday as a part of USG Week. His lecture at 3:30 in the lounge of the 720 Dormitory deals with the subject, “Is the U.S. Becoming a Second Rate Power?” The controversial figure whose “Washington Merry - Go - Round” column appears in papers throughout the nation, has been the target for vitriolic shots as well as such praise as “the columnist whose writings exert the greatest influence in the nation, as polled by the Saturday Review of Literature. During his 63 years he has, criticized and fought government officials, members of Congress and business leaders whenever he felt they were not “acting toward public interest.” He still has his running feud going with former President Harry S. Truman. After a college career during which he made Phi Beta Kappa, he spent three years as seaman, teacher and foreign editor before he hit the nation’s capital with the book Washington Merry-Go-Round. Since December 13, 1932, his column has been a source of continuing comment on the.U.S. political scene. HOWEVER, YOU DON’T HAVE TO GIVE THIS MUCH! Judy Dickinson Mascots USG Charity Drive
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 25, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-03-25 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (16 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_19600325 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19600325 |
Digital ID | mhc_19600325_001 |
Full Text |
ell
tor
5 quarter, unber 15 erth siini.*
ur°n AH.
refuse to d?y- from 6(1 during ictice ses.
mforeseen should be 10 football
dug very Walt Ki.
apparent. ; officially k, it’s no ;en seeing
, Pa., he resemb-amesake. :cessor is is a solid iir sped a.
awn the 1 to Johns veness on ; so-called
>sity. tomore, as took the ach Andy nt reason
ments on nt,” Gus-vhen con-rre re-in-rg) wrist' ieves that gh results ned until
lined the ith wrist
jS counted
dl’s cam-
lty repod ,ck Novak e Junio>
irily
1 Novaks
im Bruno ^phomort r becaus^ d and Al with o”
ie los* of ¡ricton^ -ain *°n' ¿tor* Charla
rent **
Derby Day Toda T m
Sororities
fo ‘Strip’ On Field
A in “outhouses” on the
Stationed^ uM,g 12 sorori-
vie this afternoon for es ^ ^ the Hth annual
top hon |
Archive | mhc_19600325_001.tif |
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