Page 1 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
full size
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
THE WEEKLY NEWS LETTER For Faculty and Staff November 18,1963 Voi.4, No.5 BEQUEST BENEFITS PSYCHOLOGY LABS A $40,000 bequest from the estate of the late _______ Edward Anderson, pioneer Dade dairyman, has made possible conversion of the former library reference and periodicals rooms in the Merrick Building into Department of Psychology laboratories, offices and seminar rooms. Remainder of the $76,000 conversion cost is financed by a National Science Foundation grant and $10,000 frbm general funds. Completion is scheduled for February, according to Dr. Marshall Jones, psychology chairman. SPANISH Ph.D. SCHEDULED A doctoral program in Spanish language, literature and culture has been approved to begin in September, 1964. Some 15 to 30 students will be enrolled in the UM program, according to Dr0 Kessel Schwartz, modern languages chairman. Reading knowledge of Latin, French, and German (or Russian) will be required in addition to Spanish. First degrees are expected to be conferred by June, 1966. KATZENBACH IS LAW SPEAKER U. S. Deputy Attorney General Nicholas deB. _______________ Katzenbach will be featured speaker at the School of Law's annual Homecoming Breakfast, Dec. 7 at the Miami Springs Villas Playhouse. A former Rhodes Scholar, he has been a Department of Justice official since 1961. Tickets for the 8:30 a.m. affair, honoring the Law Class of '38, are available at the Law administrative offices, Ext. 2284. BIO-M LAB Some 250 medical researchers from the U. S. PLANS SEMINAR and abroad have been invited to the Univer- sity for a special seminar in computer uses, according to Dr. Dean Clyde, Biometric Laboratory director. UM faculty are invited to the “invitation only" conference, set for December 11-13 in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall. STANFORD MEETS THE PRESS President Henry King Stanford faces his sec- ____________ ond press gathering in two weeks when he addresses the Inter-American Press Association on “The University and Modernization in Freedom," at a Nov. 20 luncheon at the Americana. He will welcome the LAPA delegates' wives when they tour the campus, Nov. 19. Last week he addressed the Associated Press Managing Editors Association which also heard Fabien Sevitzky conduct a portion of the UM Symphony Orchestra in a special concert. “The paintings have been pun manent collects ulty in the per-University's Rose Museum (See: Fac- News) - • LIBRARY Dr. W. Henry Leigh, zoology, attended the Board of Directors meeting of the Organization for Tropical Studies, of which UM is a member, at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose „ <, 0 “Bio-Social Aspects of Smoking," by Dr. Donald Calhoun. social science, and wife Lorraine, humanities, appeared in the journal A Way Out, published by School of Living, Brookville, Ohio... Drs. Robert Allen, psychology, and William Shea, speech, have received invitations to the annual awards dinner of the Kennedy Foundation for the Mentally Retarded. The program will be nationally televised, Dec. 4 from New York City... “The Man to See in Miami" is what Pageant Magazine calls former vice president Irving E» Muskat in a December article by William and Ellen Hartley... Dr. Howard Aiken's early work with computers at Harvard is outlined in the Oct. 26 New Yorker... Dr. Ho Franklin Williams will attend a meeting of the Community Planning Advisory Council of the United Community Funds and Councils of America in New York, Dec. 4 and 5 ... Dr. Margaret Jean Mustard, tropical botany, was a member of the local arrangements committee for the recent Florida State Horticultural Society meeting on Miami Beach... UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Office of Public Information
Object Description
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000114 |
Digital ID | asu01340001140001001 |
Full Text | THE WEEKLY NEWS LETTER For Faculty and Staff November 18,1963 Voi.4, No.5 BEQUEST BENEFITS PSYCHOLOGY LABS A $40,000 bequest from the estate of the late _______ Edward Anderson, pioneer Dade dairyman, has made possible conversion of the former library reference and periodicals rooms in the Merrick Building into Department of Psychology laboratories, offices and seminar rooms. Remainder of the $76,000 conversion cost is financed by a National Science Foundation grant and $10,000 frbm general funds. Completion is scheduled for February, according to Dr. Marshall Jones, psychology chairman. SPANISH Ph.D. SCHEDULED A doctoral program in Spanish language, literature and culture has been approved to begin in September, 1964. Some 15 to 30 students will be enrolled in the UM program, according to Dr0 Kessel Schwartz, modern languages chairman. Reading knowledge of Latin, French, and German (or Russian) will be required in addition to Spanish. First degrees are expected to be conferred by June, 1966. KATZENBACH IS LAW SPEAKER U. S. Deputy Attorney General Nicholas deB. _______________ Katzenbach will be featured speaker at the School of Law's annual Homecoming Breakfast, Dec. 7 at the Miami Springs Villas Playhouse. A former Rhodes Scholar, he has been a Department of Justice official since 1961. Tickets for the 8:30 a.m. affair, honoring the Law Class of '38, are available at the Law administrative offices, Ext. 2284. BIO-M LAB Some 250 medical researchers from the U. S. PLANS SEMINAR and abroad have been invited to the Univer- sity for a special seminar in computer uses, according to Dr. Dean Clyde, Biometric Laboratory director. UM faculty are invited to the “invitation only" conference, set for December 11-13 in the Otto G. Richter Library Lecture Hall. STANFORD MEETS THE PRESS President Henry King Stanford faces his sec- ____________ ond press gathering in two weeks when he addresses the Inter-American Press Association on “The University and Modernization in Freedom," at a Nov. 20 luncheon at the Americana. He will welcome the LAPA delegates' wives when they tour the campus, Nov. 19. Last week he addressed the Associated Press Managing Editors Association which also heard Fabien Sevitzky conduct a portion of the UM Symphony Orchestra in a special concert. “The paintings have been pun manent collects ulty in the per-University's Rose Museum (See: Fac- News) - • LIBRARY Dr. W. Henry Leigh, zoology, attended the Board of Directors meeting of the Organization for Tropical Studies, of which UM is a member, at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose „ <, 0 “Bio-Social Aspects of Smoking," by Dr. Donald Calhoun. social science, and wife Lorraine, humanities, appeared in the journal A Way Out, published by School of Living, Brookville, Ohio... Drs. Robert Allen, psychology, and William Shea, speech, have received invitations to the annual awards dinner of the Kennedy Foundation for the Mentally Retarded. The program will be nationally televised, Dec. 4 from New York City... “The Man to See in Miami" is what Pageant Magazine calls former vice president Irving E» Muskat in a December article by William and Ellen Hartley... Dr. Howard Aiken's early work with computers at Harvard is outlined in the Oct. 26 New Yorker... Dr. Ho Franklin Williams will attend a meeting of the Community Planning Advisory Council of the United Community Funds and Councils of America in New York, Dec. 4 and 5 ... Dr. Margaret Jean Mustard, tropical botany, was a member of the local arrangements committee for the recent Florida State Horticultural Society meeting on Miami Beach... UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Office of Public Information |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Page 1