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Od ì i UER I T A S The Weekly April 29, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION V MRS. VOLPE TO RETIRE MID-AUGUST; SYMPHONY TO JOIN MUSIC SCHOOL Mrs. Marie Volpe, Miami’s ’’great lady of musi^T4 retire as manager of the Symphony Orchestra at the close of the summer ’’Pops” series mid-August. Her new title: Manager Emeritus. In announcing the retirement of the orchestra’s only manager during its 36-year existence, President Stanford said: ’’The community owes a great debt to Mrs. Volpe for her dedication to music in this area. Through her lifelong acquaintance with the great artists of music, her energetic enthusiasm and her efficient management, the University has been able to bring to the community soloists of world renown and an orchestra that over the years has become one of the finest symphonic ensembles in the country.” Dr. Stanford also announced last week that effective June 1, the UM Symphony Orchestra will become an administrative unit within the School of Music. ’’The Dean of the School of Music will have complete responsibility for the budget of all musical activities, including the Symphony,” Dr. Stanford explained. Several candidates for the deanship are now under consideration, he said. LIBRARY UNVEILS More than 500 alumni, faculty and friends of UM’s first athletic director, PROVIN PLAQUE Harry H. Provin, have been invited to the unveiling of a memorial plaque in the Otto G. Richter Library faculty lounge at 5 p.m., Tuesday. Some $10,000 was contributed to the library construction fund in memory of Provin, who died in 1959. Mrs. Margaret Provin will receive a portrait of her late husband and a scroll listing the donors. Porter Norris is master of ceremonies; Dr. C. Doren Tharp unveils the plaque. LITTLE TIMMY A goal of 400 pints of blood has been set by the Inter-Fraternity Council NEEDS OUR BLOOD for annual blood drive in the Student Union Lower Lounge, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special beneficiary is five-year-old Timothy Strobach, who suffers from hemophilia. The North Miami Beach youngster is 1963 poster boy of the National Hemophilia Foundation. Faculty, students and public are all urged to donate. INSTITUTE SCANS University College’s division of social sciences and the Miriam and PROBLEMS OF PEACE, Ira D. Wallach Foundation bring two authorities on the problems of world peace to UM for a week-long institute starting today. Dr. Saul H. Mendlovitz, Rutgers professor of law, and Harry B. Hollins, chairman of the Fund for Education Concerning World Peace Through World Law have scheduled six lectures and five seminars. All are open to students, faculty and public free of charge. Call Ext. 2218 for schedule. COMPOSITION CONCLAVE Prof. Edwin C. Peterson, University of Pittsburgh, is featured FEATURES PITT PROF speaker at the first annual Conference on College Composition, spon- sored by the UC’s humanities division, Friday and Saturday. A pioneer of audio-visual techniques, Peterson is a former visiting lecturer for the Association of American Colleges. Free. Call Ext. 2257 for program. HUMAN RELATIONS MEETING Faculty and administrators are invited to a conference on ’’Human TO ATTRACT 75 DELEGATES Relations in Higher Education in Florida” meeting on campus Friday and Saturday. The sessions will attract some 75 representatives of all four-year colleges and universities in the state for discussion of such topics as academic freedom, college-community and student-peer relationships, and campus inter-religious problems. Planning committee chairman is Virgil I. Pitstick, acting chairman of the human relations department. Registration will be at 1 p.m. Friday in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall. RESEARCH ’’SEED MONEY” Faculty research support for the coming year, including summer PROPOSALS TO BE INVITED research, is again available through an NSF Institutional Grant (Sciences) and through a small budgetary allotment by the UM. Priority will be given to new investigators or promising research not easily funded by the usual agencies because of insufficient work or high risk. Limit: $2500 each. Department chairmen, Dr. Man and Dr. Truss will have full information on May 10. GRID TICKETS Faculty rate season football tickets will be on sale May 1-16 at the UM GOING ON SALE field house. Season ticket for full-time faculty costs $10; part-time faculty, $16.75. A $5 deposit is required. Seven home games are scheduled next season: Alabama, L.S.U., Florida, Purdue, Georgia, Florida State and Pittsburgh. RING PLAY ’’Darkness at Noon,” Sidney Kingsley’s adaptation of Arthur Koestler’s biting OPENS SUNDAY anti-communist novel, opens Sunday at the Ring. Continuing through May 11, it will feature unusual sound arrangements and ’’psychological lighting” by director Hank Diers. The plot centers on ’’Rubashov,” a Bolshevik imprisoned during the 1938 Stalin purges. FYI: The UM Credit Union has moved to Arts 136.
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Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000104 |
Digital ID | asu01340001040001001 |
Full Text | Od ì i UER I T A S The Weekly April 29, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION V MRS. VOLPE TO RETIRE MID-AUGUST; SYMPHONY TO JOIN MUSIC SCHOOL Mrs. Marie Volpe, Miami’s ’’great lady of musi^T4 retire as manager of the Symphony Orchestra at the close of the summer ’’Pops” series mid-August. Her new title: Manager Emeritus. In announcing the retirement of the orchestra’s only manager during its 36-year existence, President Stanford said: ’’The community owes a great debt to Mrs. Volpe for her dedication to music in this area. Through her lifelong acquaintance with the great artists of music, her energetic enthusiasm and her efficient management, the University has been able to bring to the community soloists of world renown and an orchestra that over the years has become one of the finest symphonic ensembles in the country.” Dr. Stanford also announced last week that effective June 1, the UM Symphony Orchestra will become an administrative unit within the School of Music. ’’The Dean of the School of Music will have complete responsibility for the budget of all musical activities, including the Symphony,” Dr. Stanford explained. Several candidates for the deanship are now under consideration, he said. LIBRARY UNVEILS More than 500 alumni, faculty and friends of UM’s first athletic director, PROVIN PLAQUE Harry H. Provin, have been invited to the unveiling of a memorial plaque in the Otto G. Richter Library faculty lounge at 5 p.m., Tuesday. Some $10,000 was contributed to the library construction fund in memory of Provin, who died in 1959. Mrs. Margaret Provin will receive a portrait of her late husband and a scroll listing the donors. Porter Norris is master of ceremonies; Dr. C. Doren Tharp unveils the plaque. LITTLE TIMMY A goal of 400 pints of blood has been set by the Inter-Fraternity Council NEEDS OUR BLOOD for annual blood drive in the Student Union Lower Lounge, Tuesday and Wednesday. Special beneficiary is five-year-old Timothy Strobach, who suffers from hemophilia. The North Miami Beach youngster is 1963 poster boy of the National Hemophilia Foundation. Faculty, students and public are all urged to donate. INSTITUTE SCANS University College’s division of social sciences and the Miriam and PROBLEMS OF PEACE, Ira D. Wallach Foundation bring two authorities on the problems of world peace to UM for a week-long institute starting today. Dr. Saul H. Mendlovitz, Rutgers professor of law, and Harry B. Hollins, chairman of the Fund for Education Concerning World Peace Through World Law have scheduled six lectures and five seminars. All are open to students, faculty and public free of charge. Call Ext. 2218 for schedule. COMPOSITION CONCLAVE Prof. Edwin C. Peterson, University of Pittsburgh, is featured FEATURES PITT PROF speaker at the first annual Conference on College Composition, spon- sored by the UC’s humanities division, Friday and Saturday. A pioneer of audio-visual techniques, Peterson is a former visiting lecturer for the Association of American Colleges. Free. Call Ext. 2257 for program. HUMAN RELATIONS MEETING Faculty and administrators are invited to a conference on ’’Human TO ATTRACT 75 DELEGATES Relations in Higher Education in Florida” meeting on campus Friday and Saturday. The sessions will attract some 75 representatives of all four-year colleges and universities in the state for discussion of such topics as academic freedom, college-community and student-peer relationships, and campus inter-religious problems. Planning committee chairman is Virgil I. Pitstick, acting chairman of the human relations department. Registration will be at 1 p.m. Friday in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall. RESEARCH ’’SEED MONEY” Faculty research support for the coming year, including summer PROPOSALS TO BE INVITED research, is again available through an NSF Institutional Grant (Sciences) and through a small budgetary allotment by the UM. Priority will be given to new investigators or promising research not easily funded by the usual agencies because of insufficient work or high risk. Limit: $2500 each. Department chairmen, Dr. Man and Dr. Truss will have full information on May 10. GRID TICKETS Faculty rate season football tickets will be on sale May 1-16 at the UM GOING ON SALE field house. Season ticket for full-time faculty costs $10; part-time faculty, $16.75. A $5 deposit is required. Seven home games are scheduled next season: Alabama, L.S.U., Florida, Purdue, Georgia, Florida State and Pittsburgh. RING PLAY ’’Darkness at Noon,” Sidney Kingsley’s adaptation of Arthur Koestler’s biting OPENS SUNDAY anti-communist novel, opens Sunday at the Ring. Continuing through May 11, it will feature unusual sound arrangements and ’’psychological lighting” by director Hank Diers. The plot centers on ’’Rubashov,” a Bolshevik imprisoned during the 1938 Stalin purges. FYI: The UM Credit Union has moved to Arts 136. |
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