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The Miami OFFICIAL Hurricane Bclaunde To Teach In Summer School of Peru University U. of M. Prof Will Conduct Course In English At Lima Dr. Victor Andres Belaunde will ¡e»ch a course in Latin American Affairs at the University of San Marcos at Lima, Peru, this summer. He has been a member of the teaching staff there for several sessions; his course will be conducted in English- Special arrangements are being made for the accomodation of American students at the Peru summer school. Tuition and living expenses are very low. A new tourist rate on the shiplines will be in effect—$210 to Callao and return. Five courses of twenty lours each are offered: Spanish Language, Latin American Literature, Peruvian Archeology and Latin American Affairs. At' the close of the summer school a ten-day trip will be arranged to the historic old ruins of Cuzco. The fee for the four weeks session of the summer school will be J25 and will admit students to all the courses in the Peru summer school. Summer school students will also be permitted to attend the regular classes of the University of San Marcos without paying any extra fee, although the semestral vacations coincide with part «f the time during which the summer school is in session. PHI ALPHA DANCE SLATED TONIGHT The Phi Alpha fraternity will hold its annual spring formal at the Shrine Temple, 1415 Biscay] boulevard, this evening. TWreg hundred invitations have been sgnt to friends of the fraternity. Stephen Kite-Powell is chairman of the affair, assisted by members of the fraternity. They include Jack Sloan, Ellis Sloan, Ray Miller, Cushman Robertson, Gary Price-"illiams, Edwin Paxton, James Koger, William Brimson, Louis Seierabend, Bud Beach, Andrew Ashe, James Gregory, Ernest Mun-?er, Joe Blacker, Nick Condon, Bernie Tison, Wade Stiles, James Grant, Walter Bergh, Frances Houghtaling, Warren Locke, Charlie Burns, George Harvey, Henry •Wris, Gene Beck, Gwynne Bier-Itamper, Russell Stoddard, A1 Shee-Jar, George Franklin, Tommy Thompson, Johnnie Ott, and Nestor Houghtaling. year book to be OUT SAT., MAY 28 Ed Wright, editor of the 1932 yearbook, announced yesterday that ut ®fty copies of the book remain unsold. If the volume of orders it, * second edition of the book will Printed. That edition may be Published a week after the first. All orders should be filed immed-P y ^fith either Ray Miller or artwell Hunter. The book will Probably be distributed one week r°m tomorrow. ??"’ors whose pictures have not * been paid for are requested to e with the business manager. Ungowned Oxford Students May Land In Coop; College Gates Close At Ten ^ WIN1RUN 0FF Uni- tU*p " Say‘ Tea «W. At English Bicv 1 XA enrded a* Intel,ect“«l Stimuli; Bicycles Are Only Mode of Transportation or worse, ] Whether for better American students find student «or, and then interview the dean - quite a different affair in an on the matter. You would have to English Moor, instructor in music at the University of Miami. Moor, after his graduation from Princeton in 1921, spent three years at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar from the state of Florida. Arthur pmVMnity’ aC'°rding t0 Wear lone Pants to dinner, as well P. Moor, instruct«, as your gown, and learn to act as host at breakfast parties to your professors and friends. If you wanted to withdraw a book from the library, you should not be surprised if they start seeking the book in the cellar of a house on For instance, at Oxford you the other side of the town would have to wear your academic gown to every class, to dinner each day, and, unless you would risk apprehension by the town police, you must wear your gown in some But, if these are disadvantages of studying at Oxford, Mr. Moor describes a number of features that are more attractive. Classes are not compulsory at Oxford, and manner when you leave the college usuaIly >’our tutor arranges for grounds after dark. Again, at Ox- you not to attend any classes in ford you would have to be in your]your last term. The week, before dormitory by 10 p.m. or be fined— the finaI examinations too is tra-if you clamored at the closed gate ditionall-v a vac4tion week for the at midnight, you would be fined aPPlicant. spent perhaps in London one guinea and possibly be expelled I or the Isle of Wight, from the university; you would Fraternities are non-existent at have to rearrange your daily sched- Oxford. In fact, Englishmen are ule to include the regular “intell- so highly amused at the “hardware” ectually-stimulating” tea party, I w°n> by Americans, that fraternity lasting one or two hours each after- P*ns, on the sweaters of American noon; you would have to learn to students attending Oxford, disap-ride a bicycle to classes, like every- Pear before the end of the first one else; you would have to be semester. But in the place of fra-prepared to read a large portion of i Amities there is a tremendous your text-books in the original number of clubs, usually built Latin and Greek. If you wished to spend the night away from Oxford, you would have to fill out a special I mence with serving of food. There Harry Shaw, Independent party candidate for the office of chief justice, won by a vote of 163 to 91 over the Progressive nominee, Silver Squarcia, in the election held at the university last Monday. The contest was a run-off, the two candidates having tied in the general elections. The following communications were received by the Hurricane this week: To the students of the University: I wish to express my gratitude to all those who supported me so generously in last Monday’s election. (signed) Harry Shaw Fellow students: I thank all those who worked for me in the recent electiori for the office of chief justice, and offer College Editors Believe Hoover To Be Reelected Majority In Questionnaire Opposed To President, But Admit Chance New York, N. Y. (NSFA)—The majority of the 106 college editors who declared their preferences in regard to the coming presidential election are opposed to the re-election of President Hoover, according to the results of a political questionnaire submitted by the Columbia Spectator to the editors of college publications all over the country. Hoover, however, received more votes in the poll than any other choice, and the majority agreed my cooperation to the man elected. That he would be- reelected next (signed) Silver Squarcia around an intellectual interest, whose meeting invariably com- application signed by your tutor, the senior censor, the junior cen- is the Asiatic Club, for example, (Continued on Page Tivo) UNIVERSITY FUND MAKING PROGRESS, CAMPAIGNERS SAY A partial list of those who donated to the fund to insure con tinuation of the operation of the University of Miami through its sent term was reported Tuesdj by the committee in chawreT 'The list folio Clifford D. Benson, A. A. Ungar, Keith Phillips, Charles H. Ehrmann, C. Lee McGarr, the Red Cross Drug Store, J. P. Simmons, the Municipal Investment Corporation, Kingman Moore, Lela P. Wheeler, H. Sayre Wheeler, Paul D. Me-Garry, the Biscayne Boulevard Company, D. J. Mahoney, M. S. Altmayer, H. U. Birdseye, Chapter M. P. E. 0., Mifflin Blackstone, R. B. Railey, Hopkins-Carter Hardware Company, F. W. Pine, the Miami Transportation Company, the Guyton Company, E. N. Belcher, W. W. Davies, M. B. Faris, the Coral Gables Woman’s club, Alda W. Flynn, Harriette J. Pan-naci, Lucile F. Downer, Ehrmann trust fund, the Miami Riviera, E. M Williams, the Laramore Giffen Company, M. Luther Stimson, Coral Gables Grocery Company, A. O. Renuart, A. F. Weber, E. F. Newburger, the Coral Gables Business and Professional Women s club, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lindborg, the Ponce de Leon restaurant, N. M. Gillespie, A. H. Grote, R. M. Simpson, S. P. Robineau Mrs. Gladys M. King, Harry R- Rowell, J R. Williams, Fernando G. Car-ratalo, George L. Elkins, Ernest C. Cole, C. F. Salzman, the Arcade Prescription pharmacy, Mitchell D. Price and the W. H. Combs Company. PART-TIME STUDES SHOULDBEBARRED, SOPHOMORE CLASS ELECTS OFFICERS Joe Cronin won the presidency of the 1932-33 junior class over Earle Howard, Bruce Colville and John Allen at an election held by the class last Tuesday. Cronin defeated Howard, candidate to succeed himself, by a vote of 30 to 22. Andy Shaw took the office of vice-president from George Reich-gott by a count of 30 to 19. Aileen Booth, candidate to succeed herself as secretary-treasurer, won over Virginia Hastings, 34 to 20. Nine candidates were nominated IS HARVARD PLEA ^or ti,reesenate positions. Mel- | drim Thomson and Ed Paxton were elected by a clear majority, while I November. The President was fav-j ored by the majority for the Republican nomination. I In the replies to the question. ! "Whom do you favor for the Presidency?”, Hoover led with 41 votes. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who received 15 votes, was second, and Newton I). Baker was next in favor with 12. Norman Thomas, Socialist leader, received 11 votes. Alfred E. Smith was favored by 6. Among the 10 other candidates who were supported in the poll was Nicholas Murray Butler, who received 2 votes. Prohibition Was voted the issue which “should play the most important part in the Presidential campaign”, with an overwhelming stand for the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Measures for (BY COLLEGE NEWS SERVICE I Cambridge, Mass., May 1,—The | tied for the third office, arvard Crimson this week had Seated an inter-campus stir of no John Howard and Stuart Patton I economic relief, problems of disarmament, international relations, and the tariff were also cited as ; being most important for consider- smaU proportions as the result of | Univ. Musicians Acclaimed ati°" ¡" elect'on.platforms. an editorial advocating the rejec Replies to the Spectator ques- tion of part-time working students For T W O - Pi a IIO Rc C11 a 1 tionnaire were received from ed-by colleges and universities. The editorial was based on a report of the Eastern College Personnel Officers Association, which has decided to oppose the so-called “sympathy appeal” by student salesmen working their way through _______ ¡tors of college papers in 43 states and the District of Columbia. Hannah Asher and Arthur Moor, j . members of the University of Miami Conservatory faculty, pre- Columbia Seniors Vote sented a two-piano recital before ! college. According to the report, an enthusiastic audience in Recital Hall on last Saturday evening.; “Standing room only” prevailed, Harris Apt To Succeed the “sympathy appeal” can only be regarded as “begging”. As a solution, The Crimson suggested : “If more students are not to be forced to resort to the unfortunate methods of self-support uncovered by the Personnel Officers Association, closer cooperation between the employment office and the committee on admission is necessary. "Students who have to depend on their earnings for all their expenses should not be admitted, for their own good as well as to injure pedals, to the humorous Ar good is being derived ! . . 1------ n New York, N.Y. (NSFA)—Ac-but even those standing thoroughly | cording to the traditional question-enjoyed the varied and charming : naire answered by the senior class of these two mus- at Columbia University, the mem-] her of the class most likely to suc-j ceed after graduation is Reed Harris, whose feud with the college from the stirring coronation scene authorities and resulting expulsion from “Boris Godounoff”, in which from college recently caused nation-unusual chime effects were pro-[ wide comment. Harris was also duced through a dexterous use of <’n'tas head-wild and chivalrous assertionist”, second as “disputant" and second on the list of those performance icians. The program ranged in mood ! Another mood was displayed in the j bia, as well as first on the list of rendition of Infante’s Spanish those who had done Columbia the dance, “Ritmo”. * moit- The Prediction of earaing- , .... ^ , J Power was sanguine with an aver- Although this two-piano form of ^ expectation of salary after five that the most few—-------- j. , , . i -—----------— —— —- ~~ from the academic opportunities : kansas Traveler in modern style. , »ho had done the most for Colum of the college. “The myth that any able-bodied man can support himself and at the same time realize the full ad-. s 0f a college education mu"t be destroyed, and there is no enable music is conceded to be years of _llf352. This expectation better way to do it than by refus- difficult to execute m a weU-bal- j ^ an the more optimistic because ¡ng admission to men who are com- j anced manner, critics agreed that the occupations elected by most of peiied to spend so much time and Hannah Asher and Arthur Moor the seniors are medicine and law, L to such ends to earn money for accomplished the difficult and pre- which are tied in first choice, with themselves that they lose many of j sented a fine performance, her teaching second, all requiring three the mo°t essential benefits of a! artistic brilliancy blending excel- ] or four more years of graduate college education.” with his intellectual insight, study.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, May 20, 1932 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1932-05-20 |
Coverage Temporal | 1930-1939 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (4 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_19320520 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19320520 |
Digital ID | MHC_19320520_001 |
Full Text | The Miami OFFICIAL Hurricane Bclaunde To Teach In Summer School of Peru University U. of M. Prof Will Conduct Course In English At Lima Dr. Victor Andres Belaunde will ¡e»ch a course in Latin American Affairs at the University of San Marcos at Lima, Peru, this summer. He has been a member of the teaching staff there for several sessions; his course will be conducted in English- Special arrangements are being made for the accomodation of American students at the Peru summer school. Tuition and living expenses are very low. A new tourist rate on the shiplines will be in effect—$210 to Callao and return. Five courses of twenty lours each are offered: Spanish Language, Latin American Literature, Peruvian Archeology and Latin American Affairs. At' the close of the summer school a ten-day trip will be arranged to the historic old ruins of Cuzco. The fee for the four weeks session of the summer school will be J25 and will admit students to all the courses in the Peru summer school. Summer school students will also be permitted to attend the regular classes of the University of San Marcos without paying any extra fee, although the semestral vacations coincide with part «f the time during which the summer school is in session. PHI ALPHA DANCE SLATED TONIGHT The Phi Alpha fraternity will hold its annual spring formal at the Shrine Temple, 1415 Biscay] boulevard, this evening. TWreg hundred invitations have been sgnt to friends of the fraternity. Stephen Kite-Powell is chairman of the affair, assisted by members of the fraternity. They include Jack Sloan, Ellis Sloan, Ray Miller, Cushman Robertson, Gary Price-"illiams, Edwin Paxton, James Koger, William Brimson, Louis Seierabend, Bud Beach, Andrew Ashe, James Gregory, Ernest Mun-?er, Joe Blacker, Nick Condon, Bernie Tison, Wade Stiles, James Grant, Walter Bergh, Frances Houghtaling, Warren Locke, Charlie Burns, George Harvey, Henry •Wris, Gene Beck, Gwynne Bier-Itamper, Russell Stoddard, A1 Shee-Jar, George Franklin, Tommy Thompson, Johnnie Ott, and Nestor Houghtaling. year book to be OUT SAT., MAY 28 Ed Wright, editor of the 1932 yearbook, announced yesterday that ut ®fty copies of the book remain unsold. If the volume of orders it, * second edition of the book will Printed. That edition may be Published a week after the first. All orders should be filed immed-P y ^fith either Ray Miller or artwell Hunter. The book will Probably be distributed one week r°m tomorrow. ??"’ors whose pictures have not * been paid for are requested to e with the business manager. Ungowned Oxford Students May Land In Coop; College Gates Close At Ten ^ WIN1RUN 0FF Uni- tU*p " Say‘ Tea «W. At English Bicv 1 XA enrded a* Intel,ect“«l Stimuli; Bicycles Are Only Mode of Transportation or worse, ] Whether for better American students find student «or, and then interview the dean - quite a different affair in an on the matter. You would have to English Moor, instructor in music at the University of Miami. Moor, after his graduation from Princeton in 1921, spent three years at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar from the state of Florida. Arthur pmVMnity’ aC'°rding t0 Wear lone Pants to dinner, as well P. Moor, instruct«, as your gown, and learn to act as host at breakfast parties to your professors and friends. If you wanted to withdraw a book from the library, you should not be surprised if they start seeking the book in the cellar of a house on For instance, at Oxford you the other side of the town would have to wear your academic gown to every class, to dinner each day, and, unless you would risk apprehension by the town police, you must wear your gown in some But, if these are disadvantages of studying at Oxford, Mr. Moor describes a number of features that are more attractive. Classes are not compulsory at Oxford, and manner when you leave the college usuaIly >’our tutor arranges for grounds after dark. Again, at Ox- you not to attend any classes in ford you would have to be in your]your last term. The week, before dormitory by 10 p.m. or be fined— the finaI examinations too is tra-if you clamored at the closed gate ditionall-v a vac4tion week for the at midnight, you would be fined aPPlicant. spent perhaps in London one guinea and possibly be expelled I or the Isle of Wight, from the university; you would Fraternities are non-existent at have to rearrange your daily sched- Oxford. In fact, Englishmen are ule to include the regular “intell- so highly amused at the “hardware” ectually-stimulating” tea party, I w°n> by Americans, that fraternity lasting one or two hours each after- P*ns, on the sweaters of American noon; you would have to learn to students attending Oxford, disap-ride a bicycle to classes, like every- Pear before the end of the first one else; you would have to be semester. But in the place of fra-prepared to read a large portion of i Amities there is a tremendous your text-books in the original number of clubs, usually built Latin and Greek. If you wished to spend the night away from Oxford, you would have to fill out a special I mence with serving of food. There Harry Shaw, Independent party candidate for the office of chief justice, won by a vote of 163 to 91 over the Progressive nominee, Silver Squarcia, in the election held at the university last Monday. The contest was a run-off, the two candidates having tied in the general elections. The following communications were received by the Hurricane this week: To the students of the University: I wish to express my gratitude to all those who supported me so generously in last Monday’s election. (signed) Harry Shaw Fellow students: I thank all those who worked for me in the recent electiori for the office of chief justice, and offer College Editors Believe Hoover To Be Reelected Majority In Questionnaire Opposed To President, But Admit Chance New York, N. Y. (NSFA)—The majority of the 106 college editors who declared their preferences in regard to the coming presidential election are opposed to the re-election of President Hoover, according to the results of a political questionnaire submitted by the Columbia Spectator to the editors of college publications all over the country. Hoover, however, received more votes in the poll than any other choice, and the majority agreed my cooperation to the man elected. That he would be- reelected next (signed) Silver Squarcia around an intellectual interest, whose meeting invariably com- application signed by your tutor, the senior censor, the junior cen- is the Asiatic Club, for example, (Continued on Page Tivo) UNIVERSITY FUND MAKING PROGRESS, CAMPAIGNERS SAY A partial list of those who donated to the fund to insure con tinuation of the operation of the University of Miami through its sent term was reported Tuesdj by the committee in chawreT 'The list folio Clifford D. Benson, A. A. Ungar, Keith Phillips, Charles H. Ehrmann, C. Lee McGarr, the Red Cross Drug Store, J. P. Simmons, the Municipal Investment Corporation, Kingman Moore, Lela P. Wheeler, H. Sayre Wheeler, Paul D. Me-Garry, the Biscayne Boulevard Company, D. J. Mahoney, M. S. Altmayer, H. U. Birdseye, Chapter M. P. E. 0., Mifflin Blackstone, R. B. Railey, Hopkins-Carter Hardware Company, F. W. Pine, the Miami Transportation Company, the Guyton Company, E. N. Belcher, W. W. Davies, M. B. Faris, the Coral Gables Woman’s club, Alda W. Flynn, Harriette J. Pan-naci, Lucile F. Downer, Ehrmann trust fund, the Miami Riviera, E. M Williams, the Laramore Giffen Company, M. Luther Stimson, Coral Gables Grocery Company, A. O. Renuart, A. F. Weber, E. F. Newburger, the Coral Gables Business and Professional Women s club, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lindborg, the Ponce de Leon restaurant, N. M. Gillespie, A. H. Grote, R. M. Simpson, S. P. Robineau Mrs. Gladys M. King, Harry R- Rowell, J R. Williams, Fernando G. Car-ratalo, George L. Elkins, Ernest C. Cole, C. F. Salzman, the Arcade Prescription pharmacy, Mitchell D. Price and the W. H. Combs Company. PART-TIME STUDES SHOULDBEBARRED, SOPHOMORE CLASS ELECTS OFFICERS Joe Cronin won the presidency of the 1932-33 junior class over Earle Howard, Bruce Colville and John Allen at an election held by the class last Tuesday. Cronin defeated Howard, candidate to succeed himself, by a vote of 30 to 22. Andy Shaw took the office of vice-president from George Reich-gott by a count of 30 to 19. Aileen Booth, candidate to succeed herself as secretary-treasurer, won over Virginia Hastings, 34 to 20. Nine candidates were nominated IS HARVARD PLEA ^or ti,reesenate positions. Mel- | drim Thomson and Ed Paxton were elected by a clear majority, while I November. The President was fav-j ored by the majority for the Republican nomination. I In the replies to the question. ! "Whom do you favor for the Presidency?”, Hoover led with 41 votes. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who received 15 votes, was second, and Newton I). Baker was next in favor with 12. Norman Thomas, Socialist leader, received 11 votes. Alfred E. Smith was favored by 6. Among the 10 other candidates who were supported in the poll was Nicholas Murray Butler, who received 2 votes. Prohibition Was voted the issue which “should play the most important part in the Presidential campaign”, with an overwhelming stand for the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Measures for (BY COLLEGE NEWS SERVICE I Cambridge, Mass., May 1,—The | tied for the third office, arvard Crimson this week had Seated an inter-campus stir of no John Howard and Stuart Patton I economic relief, problems of disarmament, international relations, and the tariff were also cited as ; being most important for consider- smaU proportions as the result of | Univ. Musicians Acclaimed ati°" ¡" elect'on.platforms. an editorial advocating the rejec Replies to the Spectator ques- tion of part-time working students For T W O - Pi a IIO Rc C11 a 1 tionnaire were received from ed-by colleges and universities. The editorial was based on a report of the Eastern College Personnel Officers Association, which has decided to oppose the so-called “sympathy appeal” by student salesmen working their way through _______ ¡tors of college papers in 43 states and the District of Columbia. Hannah Asher and Arthur Moor, j . members of the University of Miami Conservatory faculty, pre- Columbia Seniors Vote sented a two-piano recital before ! college. According to the report, an enthusiastic audience in Recital Hall on last Saturday evening.; “Standing room only” prevailed, Harris Apt To Succeed the “sympathy appeal” can only be regarded as “begging”. As a solution, The Crimson suggested : “If more students are not to be forced to resort to the unfortunate methods of self-support uncovered by the Personnel Officers Association, closer cooperation between the employment office and the committee on admission is necessary. "Students who have to depend on their earnings for all their expenses should not be admitted, for their own good as well as to injure pedals, to the humorous Ar good is being derived ! . . 1------ n New York, N.Y. (NSFA)—Ac-but even those standing thoroughly | cording to the traditional question-enjoyed the varied and charming : naire answered by the senior class of these two mus- at Columbia University, the mem-] her of the class most likely to suc-j ceed after graduation is Reed Harris, whose feud with the college from the stirring coronation scene authorities and resulting expulsion from “Boris Godounoff”, in which from college recently caused nation-unusual chime effects were pro-[ wide comment. Harris was also duced through a dexterous use of <’n'tas head-wild and chivalrous assertionist”, second as “disputant" and second on the list of those performance icians. The program ranged in mood ! Another mood was displayed in the j bia, as well as first on the list of rendition of Infante’s Spanish those who had done Columbia the dance, “Ritmo”. * moit- The Prediction of earaing- , .... ^ , J Power was sanguine with an aver- Although this two-piano form of ^ expectation of salary after five that the most few—-------- j. , , . i -—----------— —— —- ~~ from the academic opportunities : kansas Traveler in modern style. , »ho had done the most for Colum of the college. “The myth that any able-bodied man can support himself and at the same time realize the full ad-. s 0f a college education mu"t be destroyed, and there is no enable music is conceded to be years of _llf352. This expectation better way to do it than by refus- difficult to execute m a weU-bal- j ^ an the more optimistic because ¡ng admission to men who are com- j anced manner, critics agreed that the occupations elected by most of peiied to spend so much time and Hannah Asher and Arthur Moor the seniors are medicine and law, L to such ends to earn money for accomplished the difficult and pre- which are tied in first choice, with themselves that they lose many of j sented a fine performance, her teaching second, all requiring three the mo°t essential benefits of a! artistic brilliancy blending excel- ] or four more years of graduate college education.” with his intellectual insight, study. |
Archive | MHC_19320520_001.tif |
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