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ERI •Feb. 4, 1963 TAS tm OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION TRUSTEES ELECT WALKER, SUTTON Two new members of the Board of Trustees were announced by TO BOARD AT ANNUAL MEETING President Stanford following the annual meeting of the Board Jan. 29. They are William H. Walker, Jr., president of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association, and Judge Ruth L. Sutton, president of the Alumni Association. Mr. Walker was elected for a one year term. Judge Sutton will serve for two years as alumni representative, succeeding Dr. Walter Sackett, Jr., whose term expires. Immediate alumni past president, William H. Kerdyk, remains on the board for one more year. One of the original organizers of First Federal and a director since 1934, Mr. Walker is a graduate of the UM Law School, *31, and served as president of the UM Alumni Association, 1936-37. He is a member of the law firm of Blackwell, Walker and Gray. The Board also reelected Daniel J. Mahoney as chairman, Oscar E. Dooly, vice chairman, and elected its Executive Committee for the coming year. New members are R. B. Gautier, Jr., and Louis J. Hector, who succeed Robert Pentland, Jr. and James A. Ryder. Other members are Mr. Dooly, chairman, Harry Hood Bassett, Max Orovitz, Arthur A. Ungar, George E. Whitten, the Chairman of the Board and the President. UM CITIZENS BOARD Members of the UM Citizens Board held their first luncheon meeting of MEETS ON CAMPUS the new year on campus last Friday at the invitation of their president, Mr. Lon Worth Crow, Jr. The distinguished group of civic minded business leaders, who since 1949 have spearheaded various community drives for the University, heard a report from President Stanford outlining current developments and future aspirations, visited new ’buildings including the Otto G. Richter Library, constructed largely with funds bequeathed by the former Citizens Board member whose name it bears, and the J. Neville McArthur Engineering Building, whose construction was made possible by a gift from Trustee McArthur, former president of the Citizens Board. Among, other campus buildings which owe their being in large measure to the spirited support of this vital group are the Merrick and Ashe Administration buildings. MRENOIR TO PICASSO, 1914" "Renoir to Picasso, 1914" a major exhibition of art loaned OPENS AT LOWE GALLERY FEB. 9 by eight galleries and 16 private collectors throughout the country, will open to the public Saturday Feb. 9 at the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery. One of the finest collections ever assembled for Miami viewers, the exhibition was made possible by the generosity of Mrs. Nino Bisso, Gallery Regent and honorary trustee of the University who has been a patron of the Gallery since its inception and who with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lowe, original donors of the gallery, shared with them the costs of constructing the wing to house the Kress Collection. The collection of 97 paintings, drawings, sculpture and prints by 36 European artists of the 19th and 20th centuries was selected by a committee which included Gallery Director Aldridge, members of the Board of Regents and Allan McNab, former Gallery director, now director of the Chicago Art Institute. Preview for Gallery members is scheduled Friday at 8:30 p.m. The exhibition will remain on view through March 10. While it may be seen without charge by members of the Gallery and by UM students, faculty and staff, the general public will pay an admission charge of 50 cents for adults, 25 cents for children. Proceeds will go into a special fund to help finance future exhibitions. There will be no charge for admission to the Kress Collection of European Old Masters, on permanent exhibition at the Gallery. LAW SCHOOL OPENS SECOND COURSE Under a grant of $30,579 from the U.S. Office of Education, FOR REFUGEE CUBAN LAWYERS the School of Law will open its second 20-week program in United States law for refugee Cuban and other Latin American lawyers under the direction of Prof. John C. Chommie. Registration, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., starts today, continues through Friday in Room 426, Law School. Classes start Feb. 11, will meet Mon., Wed., Fri., from 7:30-9:30 p.m. The program is designed to provide the lawyers with an orientation in U.S. law and, indirectly, to help them find suitable employment. It does not qualify them to practice law, which in all states requires U.S. citizenship. For the first time, participants will use Spanish-language text materials published by the University of Miami Press to augment lectures given in English with simultaneous translation into Spanish. The texts consist of three volumes of articles on 14 categories of U.S. law. Most of these appeared originally in leading law journals and books. Among the 30 authors represented are UM law professors Stojan A. Bayitch, Ralph E. Boyer, Thomas A. Wills, Dr. Chommie and the late Dean Wesley A. Sturges. They were translated by three exiled lawyers: Dr. Eduardo LeRiverend, former Supreme Court Justice who was on the Havana faculty more than 20 years; Dr. Oscar A. Salas, professor of agrarian law at Villanueva, and Dr. Leobardo Gonzalez,former legal adviser and official translator at the U.S. Embassy in Havana. LOUIS UNTERMEYER Louis Untermeyer, Consultant in Poetry at the Library of Congress, addres-LECTURES TONIGHT ses Friends of the UM Library tonight at 8:30, Otto G. Richter Library. Topic: "Play in Poetry." Non-members admitted by donation.
Object Description
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000092 |
Digital ID | asu01340000920001001 |
Full Text | ERI •Feb. 4, 1963 TAS tm OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION TRUSTEES ELECT WALKER, SUTTON Two new members of the Board of Trustees were announced by TO BOARD AT ANNUAL MEETING President Stanford following the annual meeting of the Board Jan. 29. They are William H. Walker, Jr., president of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association, and Judge Ruth L. Sutton, president of the Alumni Association. Mr. Walker was elected for a one year term. Judge Sutton will serve for two years as alumni representative, succeeding Dr. Walter Sackett, Jr., whose term expires. Immediate alumni past president, William H. Kerdyk, remains on the board for one more year. One of the original organizers of First Federal and a director since 1934, Mr. Walker is a graduate of the UM Law School, *31, and served as president of the UM Alumni Association, 1936-37. He is a member of the law firm of Blackwell, Walker and Gray. The Board also reelected Daniel J. Mahoney as chairman, Oscar E. Dooly, vice chairman, and elected its Executive Committee for the coming year. New members are R. B. Gautier, Jr., and Louis J. Hector, who succeed Robert Pentland, Jr. and James A. Ryder. Other members are Mr. Dooly, chairman, Harry Hood Bassett, Max Orovitz, Arthur A. Ungar, George E. Whitten, the Chairman of the Board and the President. UM CITIZENS BOARD Members of the UM Citizens Board held their first luncheon meeting of MEETS ON CAMPUS the new year on campus last Friday at the invitation of their president, Mr. Lon Worth Crow, Jr. The distinguished group of civic minded business leaders, who since 1949 have spearheaded various community drives for the University, heard a report from President Stanford outlining current developments and future aspirations, visited new ’buildings including the Otto G. Richter Library, constructed largely with funds bequeathed by the former Citizens Board member whose name it bears, and the J. Neville McArthur Engineering Building, whose construction was made possible by a gift from Trustee McArthur, former president of the Citizens Board. Among, other campus buildings which owe their being in large measure to the spirited support of this vital group are the Merrick and Ashe Administration buildings. MRENOIR TO PICASSO, 1914" "Renoir to Picasso, 1914" a major exhibition of art loaned OPENS AT LOWE GALLERY FEB. 9 by eight galleries and 16 private collectors throughout the country, will open to the public Saturday Feb. 9 at the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery. One of the finest collections ever assembled for Miami viewers, the exhibition was made possible by the generosity of Mrs. Nino Bisso, Gallery Regent and honorary trustee of the University who has been a patron of the Gallery since its inception and who with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lowe, original donors of the gallery, shared with them the costs of constructing the wing to house the Kress Collection. The collection of 97 paintings, drawings, sculpture and prints by 36 European artists of the 19th and 20th centuries was selected by a committee which included Gallery Director Aldridge, members of the Board of Regents and Allan McNab, former Gallery director, now director of the Chicago Art Institute. Preview for Gallery members is scheduled Friday at 8:30 p.m. The exhibition will remain on view through March 10. While it may be seen without charge by members of the Gallery and by UM students, faculty and staff, the general public will pay an admission charge of 50 cents for adults, 25 cents for children. Proceeds will go into a special fund to help finance future exhibitions. There will be no charge for admission to the Kress Collection of European Old Masters, on permanent exhibition at the Gallery. LAW SCHOOL OPENS SECOND COURSE Under a grant of $30,579 from the U.S. Office of Education, FOR REFUGEE CUBAN LAWYERS the School of Law will open its second 20-week program in United States law for refugee Cuban and other Latin American lawyers under the direction of Prof. John C. Chommie. Registration, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., starts today, continues through Friday in Room 426, Law School. Classes start Feb. 11, will meet Mon., Wed., Fri., from 7:30-9:30 p.m. The program is designed to provide the lawyers with an orientation in U.S. law and, indirectly, to help them find suitable employment. It does not qualify them to practice law, which in all states requires U.S. citizenship. For the first time, participants will use Spanish-language text materials published by the University of Miami Press to augment lectures given in English with simultaneous translation into Spanish. The texts consist of three volumes of articles on 14 categories of U.S. law. Most of these appeared originally in leading law journals and books. Among the 30 authors represented are UM law professors Stojan A. Bayitch, Ralph E. Boyer, Thomas A. Wills, Dr. Chommie and the late Dean Wesley A. Sturges. They were translated by three exiled lawyers: Dr. Eduardo LeRiverend, former Supreme Court Justice who was on the Havana faculty more than 20 years; Dr. Oscar A. Salas, professor of agrarian law at Villanueva, and Dr. Leobardo Gonzalez,former legal adviser and official translator at the U.S. Embassy in Havana. LOUIS UNTERMEYER Louis Untermeyer, Consultant in Poetry at the Library of Congress, addres-LECTURES TONIGHT ses Friends of the UM Library tonight at 8:30, Otto G. Richter Library. Topic: "Play in Poetry." Non-members admitted by donation. |
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