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Go Get 'Em, Miami, Go Get ’Em! The University of Miami Hurricanes will open their 1960 football season tonight when the University of North Carolina Tarheels invade the Orange Bowl at 8:15 p.m. An estimated 25.000 fans will watch untested UM sophomore quarterback. Ed Johns, direct a squad "ready for the game." Early oddmakers pick the Hurricanes — who won six and lost four last year—by a touchdown. The Tarheels, who haven’t won a season’s opener in six years, dropped their first game last week to crossstate rival North Carolina State, 3-0. There are 24 returning lettermen on the Hurricane squad. North Carolina mentor Jim Hickey has 22 varsity players back from last year. During pre-game scrimmages. UM Coach Andy Gustafson and his coaching staff sported blue tee-shirts. demanding: "Beat North Carolina!" Bus transportation is being provided to the Orange Bowl from the campus by Men’s Residence Halls Association. See page 16 for further information. ★ ★ ★ Because a major Jewish holy day falls at the same time as tonight’s UM-North Carolina football game, Athletic Department officials are rechecking their up- coming yearly football schedules to avoid a similar incident. ‘‘So far, only one other conflict has been found,” said Jack Harding, director of athletics, “that being in 1962. when we play Texas Christian on the 28th of September.” He said that the UM is trying to move that game to the next night. “Nothing can be done about tonight’s unfortunate conflict,” said Harding. “We had drawn up this game contract years ago.” An estimated 3,000 students could be affected by Yom Kipper, the holiest day in the Jewish year. .1 \<:k, dick FIGHT 7 The Mia Voi.. XXXVI, No. 2 University ok Miami urricane Coral Gables, Fla. September 30.1960 UM. UNC FIGHT Pago 16 Plied by Paal Cnil CHOSEN SUNDAY NIGHT us our first Hurricane Honey is 18-year-old sophomore Ciigi Auerbach. And you can see why! The chemistry major is from Poland by way of Ecuador— and we're glad she's here. BACK ON CAMPUS New Dorm To Aid Male Housing, Too By BOB DAVIS Harncaae Capy fditer Construction of a new 720 dormitory, scheduled for completion by 1962, will not only solve female housing problems—but will aid UM males, too. UM Joining To Support Key Victims The University is joining the Dade County effort to bring relief to homeless residents on the Florida Keys. The effects of Hurricane Donna and ensuing rains have left many people without basic necessities. Students are urged to take kitchen utensils, canned goods, bedding clean clothing and blankets to the University religious houses. A caravan of trucks, donated by local concerns, will take the articles to the Keys on Oct. 8. Noble Hendrix, dean of students, said, “Campus apartments are so flexible as to occupancy, that once all the women are shifted from the apartments to the dorms, the vacancies will immediately be filled by men.” lie added that the same applied to residences for married couples. Should off-campus housing la- located for them, males would move on campus. Aside from off-campus agreements with local motels and fraternity houses, both of which house students until campus facilities are available, a more permanent arrangement is the University’s two-year lease with the owner of the Univer-< Continued on Page 4) Bigwigs Promise To Rescue Major-To-Major Dorm Plan Pick Up ID Cards Students will not be admitted free to tonight’s football game unless they have picked up their photo I.D. cards, reported the Office of Student Activities. All students who have not as yet picked up their cards should report to the Photo Center, Temporary Building 822, and either pick up their cards or get their registration card stamped with special permission. Once the I.D.’g are stamped, students may report to Gates 5 and 6 at the Orange Bowl for free admission. By MEL FRISIIMAN Hurricane Mana|i*{ Editor Key UM officials attempted this week to rescue a popular, voluntary academic housing plan which apparently had fallen into the rockpit of administrative red tape. The assistant director of housing, Mike De Carlo, charged that a top administrative office stalled the pro-! posai—to group students of the same majors in one dormitory area—after hearing only favorable remarks about it in several conferences. discussed the plan with stu- And Andrew A. Pettis, proj- dents, members of the MR1IA. ert committee chairman last vocational guidance personnel, year, told the Men's Residence faculty members and graduate lla.ll Association leaders that students—always receiving fa- he had been ''demoralized" by vorable comment—before sub-the same office. mitting it. Packard Lecture Spurs Series Ticket Sales Tickets for the first in a series of special lectures—this one to be delivered by Vance Packard—are going fast, according to Shari Friedenn, series chairman. Packard, a big drawing-card^^ ITT , „ „ s b Reuther, and Henry Fielding, noted anthropologist. because of his popular quasi-so-ciological best-sellers, “The Hidden Persuaders" and "The Status Seekers," will speak here Tuesday afternoon. Negotiations are now being worked out to lure Vice President Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy to the UM campus. Both will he in Miami during October. Other hopefuls include Ernest Hemingway, Norman Cousins, Adlai Stevenson, John Ciardi, Al-dous Huxley, Bill Buckley and George Meany. Chairman Friedenn is on the lookout for more future speakers. "If you have suggestions as to whom you would like to hear— please let me know." Students twice showed overwhelming support for the plan: ■ The MRHA unanimously voted for the setup in April, 1959. ■ A comprehensive survey j conducted by the dean of students’ office indicated that 73 per cent of the students were in favor j of the plan, 16 per cent disapproved and 11 per cent were undecided. Generally now, students with no housing preference are grouped strictly according to al-! phabetical order—and sometimes, } although they don’t request it, according to religion. "THIS IS FINE for a filing sys-: tern but not for human beings," De Carlo said. Students in the University College will not be affected by the plan, since they do not officially designate a major until their junior year. Because the proposal is voluntary, students would still be able fo room with their buddies. De Carlo said he personally The supporters pointed out that students would receive intellectual, psychological and social advantages. One of the backers, Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, said, "It makes good sense. 1 have been quite interested since it was first proposed.” Dr. Ralph S. Boggs, head of the International Center, agreed: "I am particularly fond of the program since it would group foreign students and language majors. It would be a great help to a majority of both of them.” Perry Nichols To Speiik Here Perry Nichols, one of thi country’s foremost trial attorneys, will speak before the Law School student body Tuesday, at 10 a.m. in Room 116. Admission is free. "General Preparation of a Negligence Case from the Plaintiff’s Viewpoint" is the subject of his speech. VANCE PACKARD Speaking Tuesday He will address an experted standing-room-only crowd in Beaumont lecture Hall at 4 p.m. on "The Changing Character of the American People." An informal reception will follow. Tickets—50 cents for students and $1 for non-students—are hc-ing sold in the Arts and Sciences office, Ashe Building, and at the Student Union Information Booth. Packard is the first signed speaker in the series sponsored jointly by Delta Theta Mu. Arts and Sciences honor society, and Undergraduate Student Government. Other scheduled speakers include Sigmund Spaeth, noted music critic, labor leader Walter YEP, IT SURE DID RAIN SOME AT UM THIS PAST M EEK Student Lake Hoots Were Virtually Flooded Milt* ly Bill Tule
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, September 30, 1960 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1960-09-30 |
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_19600930 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19600930 |
Digital ID | MHC_19600930_001 |
Full Text | Go Get 'Em, Miami, Go Get ’Em! The University of Miami Hurricanes will open their 1960 football season tonight when the University of North Carolina Tarheels invade the Orange Bowl at 8:15 p.m. An estimated 25.000 fans will watch untested UM sophomore quarterback. Ed Johns, direct a squad "ready for the game." Early oddmakers pick the Hurricanes — who won six and lost four last year—by a touchdown. The Tarheels, who haven’t won a season’s opener in six years, dropped their first game last week to crossstate rival North Carolina State, 3-0. There are 24 returning lettermen on the Hurricane squad. North Carolina mentor Jim Hickey has 22 varsity players back from last year. During pre-game scrimmages. UM Coach Andy Gustafson and his coaching staff sported blue tee-shirts. demanding: "Beat North Carolina!" Bus transportation is being provided to the Orange Bowl from the campus by Men’s Residence Halls Association. See page 16 for further information. ★ ★ ★ Because a major Jewish holy day falls at the same time as tonight’s UM-North Carolina football game, Athletic Department officials are rechecking their up- coming yearly football schedules to avoid a similar incident. ‘‘So far, only one other conflict has been found,” said Jack Harding, director of athletics, “that being in 1962. when we play Texas Christian on the 28th of September.” He said that the UM is trying to move that game to the next night. “Nothing can be done about tonight’s unfortunate conflict,” said Harding. “We had drawn up this game contract years ago.” An estimated 3,000 students could be affected by Yom Kipper, the holiest day in the Jewish year. .1 \<:k, dick FIGHT 7 The Mia Voi.. XXXVI, No. 2 University ok Miami urricane Coral Gables, Fla. September 30.1960 UM. UNC FIGHT Pago 16 Plied by Paal Cnil CHOSEN SUNDAY NIGHT us our first Hurricane Honey is 18-year-old sophomore Ciigi Auerbach. And you can see why! The chemistry major is from Poland by way of Ecuador— and we're glad she's here. BACK ON CAMPUS New Dorm To Aid Male Housing, Too By BOB DAVIS Harncaae Capy fditer Construction of a new 720 dormitory, scheduled for completion by 1962, will not only solve female housing problems—but will aid UM males, too. UM Joining To Support Key Victims The University is joining the Dade County effort to bring relief to homeless residents on the Florida Keys. The effects of Hurricane Donna and ensuing rains have left many people without basic necessities. Students are urged to take kitchen utensils, canned goods, bedding clean clothing and blankets to the University religious houses. A caravan of trucks, donated by local concerns, will take the articles to the Keys on Oct. 8. Noble Hendrix, dean of students, said, “Campus apartments are so flexible as to occupancy, that once all the women are shifted from the apartments to the dorms, the vacancies will immediately be filled by men.” lie added that the same applied to residences for married couples. Should off-campus housing la- located for them, males would move on campus. Aside from off-campus agreements with local motels and fraternity houses, both of which house students until campus facilities are available, a more permanent arrangement is the University’s two-year lease with the owner of the Univer-< Continued on Page 4) Bigwigs Promise To Rescue Major-To-Major Dorm Plan Pick Up ID Cards Students will not be admitted free to tonight’s football game unless they have picked up their photo I.D. cards, reported the Office of Student Activities. All students who have not as yet picked up their cards should report to the Photo Center, Temporary Building 822, and either pick up their cards or get their registration card stamped with special permission. Once the I.D.’g are stamped, students may report to Gates 5 and 6 at the Orange Bowl for free admission. By MEL FRISIIMAN Hurricane Mana|i*{ Editor Key UM officials attempted this week to rescue a popular, voluntary academic housing plan which apparently had fallen into the rockpit of administrative red tape. The assistant director of housing, Mike De Carlo, charged that a top administrative office stalled the pro-! posai—to group students of the same majors in one dormitory area—after hearing only favorable remarks about it in several conferences. discussed the plan with stu- And Andrew A. Pettis, proj- dents, members of the MR1IA. ert committee chairman last vocational guidance personnel, year, told the Men's Residence faculty members and graduate lla.ll Association leaders that students—always receiving fa- he had been ''demoralized" by vorable comment—before sub-the same office. mitting it. Packard Lecture Spurs Series Ticket Sales Tickets for the first in a series of special lectures—this one to be delivered by Vance Packard—are going fast, according to Shari Friedenn, series chairman. Packard, a big drawing-card^^ ITT , „ „ s b Reuther, and Henry Fielding, noted anthropologist. because of his popular quasi-so-ciological best-sellers, “The Hidden Persuaders" and "The Status Seekers," will speak here Tuesday afternoon. Negotiations are now being worked out to lure Vice President Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy to the UM campus. Both will he in Miami during October. Other hopefuls include Ernest Hemingway, Norman Cousins, Adlai Stevenson, John Ciardi, Al-dous Huxley, Bill Buckley and George Meany. Chairman Friedenn is on the lookout for more future speakers. "If you have suggestions as to whom you would like to hear— please let me know." Students twice showed overwhelming support for the plan: ■ The MRHA unanimously voted for the setup in April, 1959. ■ A comprehensive survey j conducted by the dean of students’ office indicated that 73 per cent of the students were in favor j of the plan, 16 per cent disapproved and 11 per cent were undecided. Generally now, students with no housing preference are grouped strictly according to al-! phabetical order—and sometimes, } although they don’t request it, according to religion. "THIS IS FINE for a filing sys-: tern but not for human beings," De Carlo said. Students in the University College will not be affected by the plan, since they do not officially designate a major until their junior year. Because the proposal is voluntary, students would still be able fo room with their buddies. De Carlo said he personally The supporters pointed out that students would receive intellectual, psychological and social advantages. One of the backers, Dr. Thurston Adams, director of student activities, said, "It makes good sense. 1 have been quite interested since it was first proposed.” Dr. Ralph S. Boggs, head of the International Center, agreed: "I am particularly fond of the program since it would group foreign students and language majors. It would be a great help to a majority of both of them.” Perry Nichols To Speiik Here Perry Nichols, one of thi country’s foremost trial attorneys, will speak before the Law School student body Tuesday, at 10 a.m. in Room 116. Admission is free. "General Preparation of a Negligence Case from the Plaintiff’s Viewpoint" is the subject of his speech. VANCE PACKARD Speaking Tuesday He will address an experted standing-room-only crowd in Beaumont lecture Hall at 4 p.m. on "The Changing Character of the American People." An informal reception will follow. Tickets—50 cents for students and $1 for non-students—are hc-ing sold in the Arts and Sciences office, Ashe Building, and at the Student Union Information Booth. Packard is the first signed speaker in the series sponsored jointly by Delta Theta Mu. Arts and Sciences honor society, and Undergraduate Student Government. Other scheduled speakers include Sigmund Spaeth, noted music critic, labor leader Walter YEP, IT SURE DID RAIN SOME AT UM THIS PAST M EEK Student Lake Hoots Were Virtually Flooded Milt* ly Bill Tule |
Archive | MHC_19600930_001.tif |
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