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ter ï RI T A S n* wwt June 3, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION STANFORD RECEIVES LL.D. FROM LOYOLA President Stanford received his fourth honorary degree—the second "this year—when Loyola University of New Orleans awarded him an honorary Doctor of Laws, May 28. Dr. Stanford’s third LL.D. in as many years lauded him for "distinguished service to higher education over the years." His other degrees: LL.D’s from Emory, ’61 and Denver, *62; a D.C.L. from Jacksonville University in April. McARTHUR GIFT The $10,000 gift of dairyman-philanthropist J. Neville McArthur, UM STARTS NEW LAB Trustee, will enable establishment next fall of Dade County’s first cryogenics laboratory in the UM engineering building that bears his name. Cryogenics is the study of the behavior of materials at very low temperatures. Several industrial firms have already donated highly-specialized equipment to the operation. In charge will be John A. Dempsey, mechanical engineering. STENNING GETS UM’s first research grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Admini- 1ST NASA GRANT stration has been awarded to Dr. Alan H. Stenning, chairman, mechanical engineering. The $92,000 award finances a study of flow problems of boiling liquids; such as fuel used in chemical and nuclear-powered rockets. UM TRADE: UM juniors will have the opportunity to spend a semester studying the United UN COURSE Nations under an exchange program with Drew University of Madison, N.J. The class commutes several times a week to the UN Building for special lectures. The exchange program enabled Drew students to study marine science at UM this semester. Applicants should see Dean Miller. Only those with superior grades should apply. BARD THEATRE Three concerts of chamber music, on July 15,22 and 29, will fill open WILL HAVE MUSIC nights in the Southern Shakespeare Repertory Theatre. Co-sponsored by the Theatre and UM’s School of Music, the Beaumont Hall presentations will be $1.25 each. On other evenings from July 9 to August 4 the Shakespeare company holds forth in BLH, featuring in rotation: Comedy of Errors, King John, Troilus and Cressida and Richard II. Individual tickets are available at Ring Theatre, 2787, for $1.75, $2.50; season books $6 and $8. OLDEST INSTITUTE The annual Institute on Reading, a continuation of the series begun ON READING HERE by Dr. Emmett A. Betts in 1934, will be held at UM July 1-12. Oldest such workshop in the U.S., according to Dr. Betts, this is its first year under UM auspices. Sessions feature work on phonetics, phonemics and special problems of reading. For registration forms, call MO-1-2511, Ext. 2280. WHERE WILLIAMS Dr. H. Franklin Williams has announced a split set of office hours to WILL BE accomplish his interim task of Dean of University College. Beginning today he plans to be in the UC offices "roughly from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m." His present office, 238 Ashe, will be his base in early morning and late afternoon this summer. NSF FUNDS The unusual "undergraduate science education program" of IMS’s radar meteoro- HISER AGAIN logical research unit has received its third National Science Foundation grant. Under the direction of Homer W. Hiser, three outstanding juniors or seniors will be given the opportunity to participate in the radar unit’s research contracts in such fields as satellite meteorology, mesoscale weather patterns and hurricanes and tropical storms. The program, in operation since 1959, gets $4,800 under its newest grant. REMISSION The June grades of all faculty children participating in the University GRADES DUE Tuition Remission Scholarship Program, both at UM and other institutions, are due in Ashe 238 by July 1 for 1963-64 approval. CLASS CONCERT Ladislao Vaida’s evening division class, the UM Musical Comedy Singers, AT CARILLON will give a concert at the Carillon Hotel at 9 p.m. this evening. Program includes selections from "Kismet," "Oklahoma," "West Side Story" and other musicals. Open free to faculty and students. DON’T LICK; Thousands of stamps running the geographical gamut from Kuwait to South-West JUST LOOK Africa are included in June’s display in Merrick 112, curator Karl Karrolin announces. Hours: Mon.-Fri., 2-4 p.m. JOB LIST Listings for "several hundred" teaching positions, on all levels throughout the AVAILABLE country are available at the UM Placement Center according to director Louis Miller.
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Full Text | ter ï RI T A S n* wwt June 3, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION STANFORD RECEIVES LL.D. FROM LOYOLA President Stanford received his fourth honorary degree—the second "this year—when Loyola University of New Orleans awarded him an honorary Doctor of Laws, May 28. Dr. Stanford’s third LL.D. in as many years lauded him for "distinguished service to higher education over the years." His other degrees: LL.D’s from Emory, ’61 and Denver, *62; a D.C.L. from Jacksonville University in April. McARTHUR GIFT The $10,000 gift of dairyman-philanthropist J. Neville McArthur, UM STARTS NEW LAB Trustee, will enable establishment next fall of Dade County’s first cryogenics laboratory in the UM engineering building that bears his name. Cryogenics is the study of the behavior of materials at very low temperatures. Several industrial firms have already donated highly-specialized equipment to the operation. In charge will be John A. Dempsey, mechanical engineering. STENNING GETS UM’s first research grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Admini- 1ST NASA GRANT stration has been awarded to Dr. Alan H. Stenning, chairman, mechanical engineering. The $92,000 award finances a study of flow problems of boiling liquids; such as fuel used in chemical and nuclear-powered rockets. UM TRADE: UM juniors will have the opportunity to spend a semester studying the United UN COURSE Nations under an exchange program with Drew University of Madison, N.J. The class commutes several times a week to the UN Building for special lectures. The exchange program enabled Drew students to study marine science at UM this semester. Applicants should see Dean Miller. Only those with superior grades should apply. BARD THEATRE Three concerts of chamber music, on July 15,22 and 29, will fill open WILL HAVE MUSIC nights in the Southern Shakespeare Repertory Theatre. Co-sponsored by the Theatre and UM’s School of Music, the Beaumont Hall presentations will be $1.25 each. On other evenings from July 9 to August 4 the Shakespeare company holds forth in BLH, featuring in rotation: Comedy of Errors, King John, Troilus and Cressida and Richard II. Individual tickets are available at Ring Theatre, 2787, for $1.75, $2.50; season books $6 and $8. OLDEST INSTITUTE The annual Institute on Reading, a continuation of the series begun ON READING HERE by Dr. Emmett A. Betts in 1934, will be held at UM July 1-12. Oldest such workshop in the U.S., according to Dr. Betts, this is its first year under UM auspices. Sessions feature work on phonetics, phonemics and special problems of reading. For registration forms, call MO-1-2511, Ext. 2280. WHERE WILLIAMS Dr. H. Franklin Williams has announced a split set of office hours to WILL BE accomplish his interim task of Dean of University College. Beginning today he plans to be in the UC offices "roughly from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m." His present office, 238 Ashe, will be his base in early morning and late afternoon this summer. NSF FUNDS The unusual "undergraduate science education program" of IMS’s radar meteoro- HISER AGAIN logical research unit has received its third National Science Foundation grant. Under the direction of Homer W. Hiser, three outstanding juniors or seniors will be given the opportunity to participate in the radar unit’s research contracts in such fields as satellite meteorology, mesoscale weather patterns and hurricanes and tropical storms. The program, in operation since 1959, gets $4,800 under its newest grant. REMISSION The June grades of all faculty children participating in the University GRADES DUE Tuition Remission Scholarship Program, both at UM and other institutions, are due in Ashe 238 by July 1 for 1963-64 approval. CLASS CONCERT Ladislao Vaida’s evening division class, the UM Musical Comedy Singers, AT CARILLON will give a concert at the Carillon Hotel at 9 p.m. this evening. Program includes selections from "Kismet," "Oklahoma," "West Side Story" and other musicals. Open free to faculty and students. DON’T LICK; Thousands of stamps running the geographical gamut from Kuwait to South-West JUST LOOK Africa are included in June’s display in Merrick 112, curator Karl Karrolin announces. Hours: Mon.-Fri., 2-4 p.m. JOB LIST Listings for "several hundred" teaching positions, on all levels throughout the AVAILABLE country are available at the UM Placement Center according to director Louis Miller. |
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