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October 7,1963 Vol.4, No.2 BETTER COME EARLY By the end of this month it is expected that all parking areas around the Ashe and Library buildings will be open to Faculty and Administration only» Spaces will be reserved only for the President, Vice Presidents and Deans and will be so designated. Parking behind the Engineering Building will also be restricted for Faculty and Administration. Staff personnel will park in the area west of the Engineering Building — but don’t dash off to buy boots. Bids were accepted Oct. 3 to provide draining for the area. Before the new parking plan can go into effect, lot signs must be changed and other details determined. President Stanford will advise everyone as soon as these are completed. STUDENT UNION START IS NEAR Ground-breaking ceremonies for a new and expanded Student Union are awaiting formal confirmation of a $2.2 million long-term loan from the Community Facilities Administration of the Housing and Home Finance Administration, according to Eugene E. Cohen, vice president and treasurer. The new Union, scheduled for completion by August, will cost an estimated $3,139,000, including fixtures and furnishings. It will encompass 197,319 square feet, making it four-and-a-third times larger than the current structure. Some 14,601 square feet of the old Union, including the cafeteria, will be included in the fully air-conditioned complex. Among the Union’s new features will be a heated, Olympic-size swimming pool, special rooms for television-viewing, music-listening and meetings of honoraries and clubs, 12 bowling lanes and storm shutters built into windows in the manner of the Otto G. Richter Library. A portion of the main wing will be constructed to support three additional stories if needed at a later date. Architect for the new Union is Robert M. Little. V’ TAS DEADLINE WILL MOVE UP Due to mechanical necessities involved in producing this year’s new, larger Veritas, previously announced deadlines must be moved up. Contributions for 4‘Speaking of People” must arrive at the Public Information Office, Ashe 248, by 5 p.m. on the Monday prior to publication; calendar and news items no later than noon of the previous Tuesday. Deadlines for the next issue, Oct. 21, will thus be Oct. 14 for ‘‘people,” Oct. 15 for news and calendar. SPEAKING OF PEOPLE 4 pace in Colleges and Universities” concerned a pai&C ¿¡-t tffe 1 rfe&nt Gov-ernmerit Research Association meeting in New Q^kajis which had President Henry King Stanford! as moderator and Dr. James Carney, assistant dean of faculties, as a participant. . . . Dr. Mary Folsom, elementary education, became the first woman to serve on a teacher training panel of the Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Mathematics at the Baltimore meeting of the Mathematical Association of America. . . . Recent and impending publications by Dr. Ramon M. Lemos. philosophy, appear in publications of four different nations: Sweden’s. “Theoria,” Italy’s “Methodos,” England’s “Ratio,” and “Philosophy and Phenomenological Research” of the U.S...... Mrs. Isabella O. KLingler, dissertation secretary, was consultant for the just published “Report of the Education Subcommittee of the Governor’s Committee on Employment of the Handicapped.” Allan H. Dana, MBA, ’61, now industrial consultant of the Florida Alcoholic Rehabilitation Program, was co-chairman of the committee. . . . Dr. John C. Finerty. School of Medicine associate dean, participated in the recent Southern Association of Medical Colleges, Academic Affairs Section, meeting at Baylor..... “A New Approach to Executive Development Programs,” by Morris A. Savitt, management, appeared in the Training Directors’ Journal. . . . UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Office of Public Information
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Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000111 |
Digital ID | asu01340001110001001 |
Full Text | October 7,1963 Vol.4, No.2 BETTER COME EARLY By the end of this month it is expected that all parking areas around the Ashe and Library buildings will be open to Faculty and Administration only» Spaces will be reserved only for the President, Vice Presidents and Deans and will be so designated. Parking behind the Engineering Building will also be restricted for Faculty and Administration. Staff personnel will park in the area west of the Engineering Building — but don’t dash off to buy boots. Bids were accepted Oct. 3 to provide draining for the area. Before the new parking plan can go into effect, lot signs must be changed and other details determined. President Stanford will advise everyone as soon as these are completed. STUDENT UNION START IS NEAR Ground-breaking ceremonies for a new and expanded Student Union are awaiting formal confirmation of a $2.2 million long-term loan from the Community Facilities Administration of the Housing and Home Finance Administration, according to Eugene E. Cohen, vice president and treasurer. The new Union, scheduled for completion by August, will cost an estimated $3,139,000, including fixtures and furnishings. It will encompass 197,319 square feet, making it four-and-a-third times larger than the current structure. Some 14,601 square feet of the old Union, including the cafeteria, will be included in the fully air-conditioned complex. Among the Union’s new features will be a heated, Olympic-size swimming pool, special rooms for television-viewing, music-listening and meetings of honoraries and clubs, 12 bowling lanes and storm shutters built into windows in the manner of the Otto G. Richter Library. A portion of the main wing will be constructed to support three additional stories if needed at a later date. Architect for the new Union is Robert M. Little. V’ TAS DEADLINE WILL MOVE UP Due to mechanical necessities involved in producing this year’s new, larger Veritas, previously announced deadlines must be moved up. Contributions for 4‘Speaking of People” must arrive at the Public Information Office, Ashe 248, by 5 p.m. on the Monday prior to publication; calendar and news items no later than noon of the previous Tuesday. Deadlines for the next issue, Oct. 21, will thus be Oct. 14 for ‘‘people,” Oct. 15 for news and calendar. SPEAKING OF PEOPLE 4 pace in Colleges and Universities” concerned a pai&C ¿¡-t tffe 1 rfe&nt Gov-ernmerit Research Association meeting in New Q^kajis which had President Henry King Stanford! as moderator and Dr. James Carney, assistant dean of faculties, as a participant. . . . Dr. Mary Folsom, elementary education, became the first woman to serve on a teacher training panel of the Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Mathematics at the Baltimore meeting of the Mathematical Association of America. . . . Recent and impending publications by Dr. Ramon M. Lemos. philosophy, appear in publications of four different nations: Sweden’s. “Theoria,” Italy’s “Methodos,” England’s “Ratio,” and “Philosophy and Phenomenological Research” of the U.S...... Mrs. Isabella O. KLingler, dissertation secretary, was consultant for the just published “Report of the Education Subcommittee of the Governor’s Committee on Employment of the Handicapped.” Allan H. Dana, MBA, ’61, now industrial consultant of the Florida Alcoholic Rehabilitation Program, was co-chairman of the committee. . . . Dr. John C. Finerty. School of Medicine associate dean, participated in the recent Southern Association of Medical Colleges, Academic Affairs Section, meeting at Baylor..... “A New Approach to Executive Development Programs,” by Morris A. Savitt, management, appeared in the Training Directors’ Journal. . . . UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Office of Public Information |
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