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The Miami ‘ \v Volume XXVII University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 19. 1951 No. 3 Students Give Blood Monday Story On Page 2 ★ ★★ ★★★ ★★★ Hurricane Wins 8th Straight All-American Story On Page 3 ★ ★★ ★★★ ★★★ Photo by Aronow MEMBERS OF THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION’S 1951-52 cabinet pose obligingly for the photographer before they plunge into their work. From left to right, front row, are A1 Freehling, student press secretary; Jack Bohlen. SA president; Gloria Dittos, SA treasurer; George Smallman, director of spirit-steering and Bill Gibson, director of finance. Back row, left to right, are Dud Newbold, director of the Pep club; Larry Hollander, co-director of social welfare; Fritz Richter, director of social activities; Paul Anton, co-director of social welfare and Ed Dick, secretary-at-large. Camera shy were Jim Sandberg, director of cultural activities and Bob Abel, National Student association representative. Aiding the SA cabinet are Wally Levine, vice president and Karky Hughes, secretary. The entire group of SA officers will be handling student government affairs until the general SA elections in the spring. The cabinet holds closed meetings every Monday afternoon, but any student wishing to offer any suggestions to cabinet members may do so by contacting Bohlen in the SA office Room 4 in the Student Club. Photo by Aronow WAITING IN LINE TO SIGN UP for the blood drive early Thursday morning are U-M students Bob Crawford, June Jackson, Jim Blumberg and Karl Leib. Putting their names on the list is Holmes Brad-dock, assistant to the director of student activities. Approximately 200 students have already volunteered to give their blood for the armed forces. On Monday and Tuesday a mobile blood unit will set up headquarters in the Student Club's lower lounge to take blood donations. Chairman of the drive. Bill Baird said that he hopes to get at least 2,000 points from the 10,000 students here. The organization which contributes the most blood as a group will receive a special writeup in Tempo magazine. Units will be on the campus every month during the duration of the blood drive. Practically all of the blood donated will be shipped almost immediately in plasma form to Korea. Students under 21 years of age and all coeds living on campus must have written parental consent before they can give their blood. 'Giant' Homecoming Slated To Highlight U-M's 25th Birthday Story On Page 2 Hurricane Highlights Students To Grade Faculty For Third Consecutive Semester Page 3 Frosh Gridders Open Against Georgia Tech Tomorrow Night Page 16 Ring Theater Drops Curtain With "Road To Rome" Monday Night Page 3 IFC Council Tables Hazing Ban Amendment Until Oct. 31 Meeting Page 4 Hurricane Honey No. 3 • Photo by Fuher GOING MY WAY asks this week’s Honey pretty Betty Deriso, a local product. Betty, a freshman English major, was born in Jacksonville, but considers herself a native Miamian having lived here since 1935. Just turned 18 and sporting an eye-pleasing combination of brown hair and brown eyes, Betty stands five feet, six inches and weighs 115 pounds. In her spare time Betty favors swimming, horseback riding and quiet dates. A Chi Omega pledge, she has aspirations of becoming a creative writer. Betty, if you will trot down to the Orange bowl’s 50-yard line tonight during halftime John Basil, Hurricane business manager will pin an orchid on you.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 19, 1951 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1951-10-19 |
Coverage Temporal | 1950-1959 |
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_19511019 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19511019 |
Digital ID | MHC_19511019_001 |
Full Text | The Miami ‘ \v Volume XXVII University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 19. 1951 No. 3 Students Give Blood Monday Story On Page 2 ★ ★★ ★★★ ★★★ Hurricane Wins 8th Straight All-American Story On Page 3 ★ ★★ ★★★ ★★★ Photo by Aronow MEMBERS OF THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION’S 1951-52 cabinet pose obligingly for the photographer before they plunge into their work. From left to right, front row, are A1 Freehling, student press secretary; Jack Bohlen. SA president; Gloria Dittos, SA treasurer; George Smallman, director of spirit-steering and Bill Gibson, director of finance. Back row, left to right, are Dud Newbold, director of the Pep club; Larry Hollander, co-director of social welfare; Fritz Richter, director of social activities; Paul Anton, co-director of social welfare and Ed Dick, secretary-at-large. Camera shy were Jim Sandberg, director of cultural activities and Bob Abel, National Student association representative. Aiding the SA cabinet are Wally Levine, vice president and Karky Hughes, secretary. The entire group of SA officers will be handling student government affairs until the general SA elections in the spring. The cabinet holds closed meetings every Monday afternoon, but any student wishing to offer any suggestions to cabinet members may do so by contacting Bohlen in the SA office Room 4 in the Student Club. Photo by Aronow WAITING IN LINE TO SIGN UP for the blood drive early Thursday morning are U-M students Bob Crawford, June Jackson, Jim Blumberg and Karl Leib. Putting their names on the list is Holmes Brad-dock, assistant to the director of student activities. Approximately 200 students have already volunteered to give their blood for the armed forces. On Monday and Tuesday a mobile blood unit will set up headquarters in the Student Club's lower lounge to take blood donations. Chairman of the drive. Bill Baird said that he hopes to get at least 2,000 points from the 10,000 students here. The organization which contributes the most blood as a group will receive a special writeup in Tempo magazine. Units will be on the campus every month during the duration of the blood drive. Practically all of the blood donated will be shipped almost immediately in plasma form to Korea. Students under 21 years of age and all coeds living on campus must have written parental consent before they can give their blood. 'Giant' Homecoming Slated To Highlight U-M's 25th Birthday Story On Page 2 Hurricane Highlights Students To Grade Faculty For Third Consecutive Semester Page 3 Frosh Gridders Open Against Georgia Tech Tomorrow Night Page 16 Ring Theater Drops Curtain With "Road To Rome" Monday Night Page 3 IFC Council Tables Hazing Ban Amendment Until Oct. 31 Meeting Page 4 Hurricane Honey No. 3 • Photo by Fuher GOING MY WAY asks this week’s Honey pretty Betty Deriso, a local product. Betty, a freshman English major, was born in Jacksonville, but considers herself a native Miamian having lived here since 1935. Just turned 18 and sporting an eye-pleasing combination of brown hair and brown eyes, Betty stands five feet, six inches and weighs 115 pounds. In her spare time Betty favors swimming, horseback riding and quiet dates. A Chi Omega pledge, she has aspirations of becoming a creative writer. Betty, if you will trot down to the Orange bowl’s 50-yard line tonight during halftime John Basil, Hurricane business manager will pin an orchid on you. |
Archive | MHC_19511019_001.tif |
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